jofmil - NB the following is a very layman's explanation, apologies to physicists everywhere...
there were a couple of chaps a while ago who theorised that, very briefly, when the big bang happened, light speed as we know it was not a constraint. Inasmuch as time itself only came into existence then. This conclusion was due to finding new stars (the oldest ones) appearing at the very edge of the visible universe.
Also, a friend of mine (who now works at ESA) told me about an article in 1990 about the theoretical possibility of light faster than light. This is because photons and anti-photons split and rejoin as they travel (imagine the outline of a string of beads); so if this action was not possible eg extreme compression of the space in which the beam is travelling, the light would travel a little faster than it naturally does in our known universe.