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image of an information card about the Affordable Connectivity Program. In the top section of the image is a family with brown skin and black hair, two parents, male and female,  and a teenager, female, looking at a laptop. In the bottom section of the image is an older adult male, light skinned, bald with glasses and a short beard holding a tablet.

What is it?

The Affordable Connectivity Program is an FCC program that helps connect families and households struggling to afford internet service.

The benefit provides:

  • Up to $30/month discount for internet service
  • Up to $75/month discount for households on qualifying Tribal lands; and
  • A one-time discount of up to $100 for a laptop, desktop computer or tablet purchased through a participating provider

Two Steps To Enroll

  • 1. Go to AffordableConnectivity.gov to submit an application or print a mail-in application
  • 2. Contact your preferred participating provider to select an eligible plan and have the discount applied to your bill.

Learn More

Call 877-384-2575, or visit fcc.gov/acp

National Public Radio
APRIL 18, 2015

Netflix's original series now have a superhero among them. Comic fans know Daredevil as a crusader. He's a Marvel character who, in addition to his superhuman abilities, has a very human disability: blindness.

Needless to say, Daredevil has quite a few fans with visual impairments — and they were looking forward to the show.

But until this week, Netflix had no plans to provide the audio assistance that could have helped those fans follow the show.

The FCC requires broadcasters to provide audio descriptions of many programs so blind people can enjoy TV along with everyone else.

But Netflix isn't a broadcaster — it's an Internet-based service. And they didn't plan to provide that audio.

In other words, the superhero would not have been able to enjoy his own program.

Robert Kingett, a journalist and activist in Chicago, is a fan of Daredevil. He's blind and also lives with cerebral palsy. And when he learned the show wouldn't have audio descriptions, Kingett recalls, "I said, 'Well, that's just utterly insane.' "

Read more  . . . Netflix

Transcript