It doesn't. The FCC does not regulate the internet because information on the internet is owned; when you create any type of data and place it on the Internet you are placing it on hard drive space - which is owned by whomever owns the computer itself, therefore it's private property and the only regulation it's subject to is that of federal law and nothing else.
The FCC was created by federal law 47 USC §151 to regulate wire and radio mediums for interstate and world-wide communications. The FCC has treated the "net" as some mysterious "wholly new medium for human communications" and not the broadcasting and private exchanges of communications in the wire medium the "net"has always been. This wholly ignorant SCOTUS mistake was the Reno v ACLU (96-511) error and done before WiFi radio became pervasive.
The block-quoted belief is perhaps why the FCC felt they could get away with malfeasance in not regulating communications via the common carrier of networked wires and ignoring federal criminal statutes 18 U.S.C. §§(1462, 1464, 2511).
No court has even read much of the communications act of 1934. The FCC will be required to regulate internet wire television and everything else on the ""net exactly they way they try to monitor radio TV. This is a clear generational issue. If you grew up without computers, cell phones, and porn-er-net, explains the rediculous errors of the senior citizen judges. it is hard to apply law to technology you have absolutely no formative life experiences with. When people who are around 45 now make up Congress and 100% of the Supreme Court the porn-er-net is over. The porn-er-net will be banned by the rest of the world long, long before this.
Because the airwaves are consider public property, and their use has to be available, without private control or conflict between its various users.
For example, regulation keeps stations from boosting their power to the extent that they can entirely block out other stations over a wide area, and restricts them to using a particular wavelenth (channel) to avoid interference with other licensed users.
Regulation also provides a degree of censorship, prohibiting slanderous, illegal, harmful, malicious, or publicly disruptive broadcasts.
to prevent interference on the airwaves
The FCC
The Federal Communication Commission or FCC is at the top of the food chain. One of it's the many sub agencies the Mass Media Bureau, regulates radio and television broadcasting.
The Federal Trade Commission regulates advertising and claims, such as ads for high-technology products.
The Commerce Department regulates interstate commerce, as well as weights and measures.
No. See http://wireless.fcc.gov/services/index.htm?job=service_home&id=cb, which says "License documents are neither needed nor issued and there are no age or citizenship requirements. As long as you use only an unmodified FCC certificated CB unit, you are provided authority to operate a CB unit in places where the FCC regulates radio communications."
I am not entirely sure but I know at the station I work at Its ofcom.
FCC- fed. communications commission
The Federal Communications Commission regulates all public broadcast media.
FCC = Federal Communications Commission
The Federal Communication Commission or FCC is at the top of the food chain. One of it's the many sub agencies the Mass Media Bureau, regulates radio and television broadcasting.
federal communications commission
That would be the FCC (Federal Communication Commission)
The Federal Communications Commission regulates telephone services.
FCC regulates everything that has to do with communications... http://www.fcc.gov/In the USA and possessions, it's the Federal Communications Commission (FCC),an agency under the US Department of Commerce.
Federal Communications Commission
The Federal Communications Commission regulates all US satellite systems.
The site FCC gov is the official site of the Federal Communications Commission. The Federal Communications Commission is the organization that regulates interstate and international communications.
Federal Communications Commission (FCC)