Company: AGGI
Filing Date: 2025-10-31
Form Type: 10-12G
Source: 0001683168-25-007875
Chunk: 18

Company: Allied Energy, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-10-31
Form: 10-12G
Chunk 18
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 marketing
generally.

Our business depends on continued and unimpeded access to the Internet by us and by our customers and their end-users. Internet access providers or distributors may be able to block, degrade or charge for access to our content, which could lead to additional expenses to us and our customers and the loss of end-users and advertisers.

Products
and services such as ours depend on our ability and the ability of our customers’ users to access the Internet. Currently, this
access is provided by companies that have, or may have in the future, significant market power in the broadband and Internet access marketplace,
including incumbent telephone companies, cable companies, mobile communications companies, and government-owned service providers. Some
of these providers may take or have stated that they may take measures that could degrade, disrupt, or increase the cost of user access
to products or services such as ours by restricting or prohibiting the use of their infrastructure to support or facilitate product or
service offerings such as ours, or by charging increased fees to businesses such as ours to provide content or to have users access that
content. In 2015, the Federal Communications Commission (“FCC”) released an order, commonly referred to as net neutrality,
that, among other things, prohibited (i) the impairment or degradation of lawful Internet traffic based on content, application, or service
and (ii) the practice of favoring some Internet traffic over other Internet traffic based on the payment of higher fees. In December
2017, the FCC voted to overturn the net neutrality regulations imposed by the 2015 order. In April 2024, the FCC voted to reinstate the
net neutrality regulations, but the reinstated rules were temporarily blocked by the Sixth Circuit U.S. Court of Appeals in August 2024
pending the resolution of legal challenges brought by internet service providers. This area of the law remains uncertain, and we cannot
predict the final outcome of the challenges to legal protections of net neutrality at the state and federal level. In this regulatory
environment, we could experience discriminatory or anti-competitive practices that could impede our growth, cause us to incur additional
expense or otherwise negatively affect our business.

New tax treatment of companies engaged in Internet commerce may adversely affect the commercial use of our services and our financial results.

Due to the
global nature of social media and our services, various states or foreign countries might attempt to regulate our transmissions or levy
sales, income, or other taxes relating to our activities. Tax authorities at the international, federal, state