Afternoon Briefing: ‘Broadband labels’ soon coming to internet packages

Afternoon Briefing: ‘Broadband labels’ soon coming to internet packages

Good afternoon, Chicago.

Much like nutritional labels on food products, “broadband labels” for internet packages will soon tell you just what is going into the pricing of your service, thanks to new rules adopted by the Federal Communications Commission this week. Following the design of FDA food labels, these broadband labels will provide easy-to-understand, accurate information about the cost and performance of high-speed internet service to help consumers avoid junk fees, price hikes, and other unexpected costs.

Internet service providers selling home access or mobile broadband plans will be required to have a label for each plan starting today.

Here’s what else is happening today. And remember, for the latest breaking news in Chicago, visit chicagotribune.com/latest-headlines and sign up to get our alerts on all your devices.

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Isaiah Brewer, left, a mentee of Hermene Hartman, the publisher of N’Digo, speaks with Hartman on Feb. 9, 2024, in Chicago. (Vincent Alban/Chicago Tribune)

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Back in the ’30s and ’40s, Chicago was the country music capital of the world. That’s when the WLS “National Barn Dance” aired, with June Storey, from left, Gene Autry and Patsy Montana, circa 1940s. (Chicago Tribune archive)

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Two relatively young men were sitting in a radio studio a few days ago talking about a radio show that started 100 years ago and one of them was saying, “This part of the city’s history should be better known, the part the city, this radio show, played in popularizing country music. Without Chicago, there would have been no Nashville, no Grand Ole Opry. … This is where the country music genre was born.”

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