Category Archives: Uncategorized

Where is all that college tuition money going? Is $60,000 per year too LOW?

Check out this thought-provoking piece of reporting from NPR about where an undergraduate student's tuition dollars go and the debate over what should be included in calculating the cost of a student's education. Depending on who's answering that question, one can view tuition as terribly inflated or — if you count financial aid subsidies and […]

What does A-1 Exterminating not want its potential customers to learn about?

by Paul Alan Levy This week Public Citizen became involved in a case pending in a trial court in Alabama, in which a lawyer is handling both a mass action and a class action against an exterminating company named A-1 Exterminating and its affiliates.  Plaintiffs allege that A-1 both provides bad services and fraudulently advertising […]

A rare victory for privacy: quick policy reversal on license-plate tracking

Within a matter of days, the Department of Homeland Security announced plans for a broad network of license plate readers to collect information on Americans' movements nationwide, and then scrapped it. So it appears that on the right issues, at the right moments, privacy advocates and the people they represent have some pull. Wish this […]

FCC tries to revive net neutrality without rocking the boat; politically weak decision could prove disastrous

by Andrew D. Selbst, guest blogger A month ago, I wrote about Verizon v. FCC, the D.C. Circuit decision striking down the FCC’s net neutrality regulations. In that post, I noted that the decision contained two distinct holdings. First, the FCC could not impose common carrier regulations (net neutrality is one such regulation) on broadband […]

KlearGear update: debt collector agrees that “non-disparagement clause” debt is void

We don’t often have occasion to praise debt collectors on this site, so it’s worth taking note when a debt collection company does the right thing. As many of you will remember from previous posts (see here and here), an online retailer called KlearGear tried to extort $3500 from its customer John Palmer because his […]

Another major data breach — this time at the on-line “crowdfunding” site Kickstarter

Yesterday, I received an unhappy email from the CEO of the on-line "crowdfunding" site Kickstarter, which regular folks use to raise money for unusual and creative projects and businesses. The email began: On Wednesday night, law enforcement officials contacted Kickstarter and alerted us that hackers had sought and gained unauthorized access to some of our […]

Former FCC commissioner Michael Copps on media consolidation

Former Michael Copps is very worried about media consolidation. Apparently spurred by what Copps calls "the stunning announcement that Comcast hopes to buy Time-Warner … for more than $45 billion" — a merger that he says could "run roughshod over consumers" — Copps has penned this lengthy "Dear Journalists" letter in the Columbia Journalism Review. Here's […]