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At least 4 killed in Oklahoma tornado outbreak; 10 shot outside Florida bar; AZ receives millions of dollars for solar investments; Maine prepares young people for climate change-related jobs, activism; Feds: Grocery chain profits soared during and after a pandemic.

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Ukraine receives much-needed U.S. aid, though it's just getting started. Protesting college students are up in arms about pro-Israel stances. And, end-of-life care advocates stand up for minors' gender-affirming care in Montana.

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More rural working-age people are dying young compared to their urban counterparts, the internet was a lifesaver for rural students during the pandemic but the connection has been broken for many, and conservationists believe a new rule governing public lands will protect them for future generations.

An Internet, “If You Can Keep It”

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Tuesday, October 9, 2012   

NASHUA, N.H. - Founding Father Ben Franklin is said to have answered a question about what kind of rule the Constitutional Convention of 1787 had created by saying, "A republic, if you can keep it."

Advocates working to keep the Internet free from restrictions and regulations say, in effect, the same thing: it's up to Internet users to keep it free. Last winter's effort by Congress to pass bills called SOPA and PIPA to regulate the Internet was resoundingly defeated by an unprecedented outpouring of pushback, facilitated by the Net itself.

John Perry Barlow, a founder of a digital freedom watchdog group, says the next assault on the Internet could come from government or industry or some other party that won't necessarily play by the rules.

"If the response of the democratic process to these kinds of regulations is not in their favor, then they avoid the democratic process."

Barlow and other Internet experts told corporate executives at a Wall Street confab last week that the so-called "digital freedom" movement is alive - and vigilant.

Jim Harper of the libertarian Cato Institute was on hand to show how protecting digital freedom doesn't have to be a partisan endeavor.

"Someone comes along with their big idea about how it's supposed to, supposed to go, and people do, they do love their Internet. And if you're going to interfere with how it's going to work for them, they will rise up, and that's good news. That's the reason why the Internet sort of defaults toward freedom."

Harold Feld of the watchdog group Public Knowledge says he's sure another effort to regulate the Web, like SOPA and PIPA, will come out of Capitol Hill.

"It has to be not a 'fire and forget' idea: 'Yeah, we won, that'll never happen again.' It really has to be, as with any fundamental right, that people are willing to defend it."

Before John Perry Barlow became co-founder of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, he was a lyricist for the Grateful Dead.

"We invented viral marketing. We let people tape our concerts and, you know, showed that there was an economic model there. You could actually make a lot of money by giving your stuff away."

Having once co-written with Bob Weir a Grateful Dead song called "And the Music Never Stopped," Barlow is now determined that the free flow of information on the Internet will never stop.




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