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A recent lawsuit filed by Twitter against Texas AG
Ken Paxton claims that an investigation into the company s
internal content moderation policies violates the First
Amendment.
On January 13, Paxton issued a civil investigative demand (CID) to
Twitter seeking information related to the company s policies
and procedures for content moderation. In addition to requesting
all versions of Twitter s terms of use, terms of service, and
policies and procedures related to content moderation since 2017,
the CID directs the company to produce all communications regarding
the social media platform Parler. This last request includes both
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CFTC Commissioner Dan M. Berkovitz argued that futures contracts tied to the
outcome of sporting events should be permitted to be traded on a
designated contract market ( DCM ) if it can be
demonstrated that there is an economic purpose and the contract
provides impartial access to the public.
Mr. Berkovitz s statements came following the recent
withdrawal by Eris Exchange ( ErisX ) of a proposal to list futures contracts tied to the
outcome of NFL games. Mr. Berkovitz said that the proposal was deficient because (i) there was insufficient evidence
By Reuters Staff
1 Min Read
FILE PHOTO: A T-Mobile logo is advertised on a building sign in Los Angeles, California, U.S., May 11, 2017. REUTERS/Mike Blake
AMSTERDAM (Reuters) - T-Mobile Netherlands said on Wednesday it will invest at least 700 million euros ($832 million) to build and offer fibre optic networks in Dutch cities together with Open Dutch Fibre, a joint venture between KKR Infrastructure and Deutsche Telecom Capital Partners.
The project aims to reach 1 million households within five years, it said.
T-Mobile competes against KPN and VodafoneZiggo in the Netherlands.
In March, KPN announced a 440 million euro partnership with pension fund giant ABP to speed up its fibre optic rollout, targeting customers in under-served areas.
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As a result of the COVID-19 public health emergency, telehealth
has evolved and will continue to evolve. As part of this evolution,
CMS finalized a rule that expands Medicare coverage for telehealth
services. This final rule, along with other new rules and waivers
by the federal government, state governments and private payors,
has significantly expanded access to and coverage of virtual health
care services in response to the public health emergency, and to
the relief of providers and patients, some of these changes are now