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The infrastructure bill's biggest winners (and losers)

Good morning! This Friday, who wins and who loses in the $1 trillion infrastructure bill, people love a four-day workweek, and ByteDance is shutting down some of its education offerings to comply with China's edtech rules.
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There's a little something — and in some cases, a lotta something — for everyone in the bipartisan infrastructure bill that's currently getting hammered out in the Senate.
The $1 trillion bill includes $550 billion in new spending, giving anyone from telecom giants to device manufacturers a lot to like. But even in a bill that stretches more than 2,700 pages long, not everyone got what they wanted.
Who's winning? Telecom giants, but mostly Comcast. The bill includes a whopping $65 billion to expand broadband connectivity, including a $42.5 billion grant program that will directly fund broadband deployment in unserved and underserved parts of the country. There's also more than $14 billion set aside in internet subsidies for low-income Americans.
Tesla and Proterra, the country's leading e-bus maker, also come out on top. The infrastructure bill sets aside $7.5 billion to build a network of electric vehicle charging stations across the country.
Then, of course, there's Amazon. (Disclosure: My husband works for Amazon.) The ecommerce giant has been on an infrastructure lobbying blitz this year, spending nearly $10 million on infrastructure issues in the first six months of 2021, according to an analysis by The Washington Post.
If you run a cybersecurity company, the bill is also probably good for you. It includes $1 billion in grant funding to be administered over four years by the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency.
OK, so what about the losers? Things are about to get harder for crypto exchanges.
Municipal broadband networks lose out, too. When President Biden first introduced his infrastructure plan, proponents of municipal networks had high hopes that the bill might radically redefine the market by prioritizing government-run networks and infusing the telecom industry with a raft of new, more affordable competitors. But those provisions dropped out of the bipartisan deal.
— Issie Lapowsky (email | twitter)
A version of this story originally appeared on Protocol.com.
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