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Activision will now only offer refunds of $1 to $1.95

Activision will now only offer refunds of $1 to $1.95 per song purchased. For those who purchased Music For Your Family Day, for example, Activision will offer $1.50 per song purchased.

Guitar Heroes Live is currently available on PlayStation 4, Xbox One, PC and Linux in North America and North and South America.The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is set to vote on an amendment to its net neutrality rules on Wednesday. The FCC is also expected to decide on its plans to require a new rule with new requirements for how mobile providers get their services, and the commission will not hold hearings on the rules until at least August.

The FCC's vote on the amendment would take effect before the new rules are finalized. The proposed rules would allow mobile providers such as Google and Facebook to offer faster and more flexible wireless services. The FCC currently requires wireless carriers to provide more than two gigabits per second (gbps) of data speed, or 4.5 megabits per second, when using a standard carrier's networks.

The FCC said that using more than four gigabit per second speeds would be "unacceptable" and should be reduced to 4.5 Mbps by 2015. The rule would also raise the rate of broadband internet service, which the FCC says will increase broadband usage by a million gigabits per second by 2015.

Under the proposed rules, mobile manufacturers would be forced to make up for reduced service by raising the speed of their networks.

The proposal also includes a provision that would require the FCC to require broadband users to have a fixed provider's service. A new requirement would require the operator of mobile broadband to provide at least one wireless carrier's mobile service.

The proposal also includes new "open" or "unlimited" net neutrality rules that require companies to disclose how they use the internet to consumers, which would make it easier for companies to discriminate under the Open Internet rules.

The proposal also includes a provision requiring internet service providers to make specific disclosures about the type of access they provide service to their consumers. The FCC said that this "opens the door to companies using their networks to discriminate and to avoid a clear, transparent and open internet."

The proposed rules also require ISPs to set rates for access. A new rule would require ISPs to post a "price point" on how much customers pay online.

The proposal was co-sponsored by Rep. Joe Barton of Austin (R-Texas) and Rep.

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