"...But when The Markup ran a statistical test controlling for density, it still found AT&T disproportionately offered slower speeds to lower-income areas in three out of four of the 20 cities where we investigated their service."
From the article: "In a letter to the FCC, AT&T insisted its high-speed internet deployments are driven by “household density, not median incomes.” ...
*New Blog Post!!* Talking about what I've learned from producing 3 seasons of the #richfieldbranchlibrarypodcast (we're about to start recording Season 4!) Plus, I added subject categories so you can explore the blog by theme :) https://t.co/2XPoON3x99
@CouplaDays@NewYorker 'Kill' is the part that needs the quote marks mom. The whole point of the article is getting away from distortion and propaganda and remembering what we know about life and death, which is that it's very messy and complicated and scary and not some sort of ideal.
@blprnt Lol, my Cleveland is showing. It sucks being told you're the minor leagues for a has-been city that's hogging resources when you're just trying to be a city at all, and we've also been indoctrinated into thinking you all are tough/vicious so we maybe punch too hard.
@blprnt Especially when 5%+ of your city is populated by people who *didn't* make it in NY, so they came back, and want to talk about NY all the time. Like, child, you grew up with me, you weren't better than me before you left, you're not better now!
"...A proposed measure would allow private citizens to sue anyone who helps a resident get an abortion elsewhere; the law would reward successful plaintiffs with $10K. The closest analogue to this kind of legislation is the Fugitive Slave Act of 1793." https://t.co/mHKkZwGJhC
@CourtneyMcNaull As far as integration, idk actually, it's been a while since I played with Google Analytics. It used to be a thing you could do for free, now it sounds like it might be a paid thing (or a coding thing) https://t.co/dRmoS38OSj