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Should The Government Fix Slow Internet Access? (fivethirtyeight.com)

An anonymous reader quotes a story from Nate Silver's FiveThirtyEight site about "the worst internet in America": FiveThirtyEight analyzed every county's broadband usage using data from researchers at the University of Iowa and Arizona State University and found that Saguache, Colorado was at the bottom. Only 5.6 percent of adults were estimated to have broadband... It has some of the worst internet in the country. That's in part because of the mountains and the isolation they bring... Its population of 6,300 is spread across 3,169 square miles 7,800 feet above sea level, but on land that is mostly flat, so you can almost see the full scope of two mountain ranges as you drive the county's highway...

But Saguache isn't alone in lacking broadband. According to the Federal Communications Commission, 39 percent of rural Americans -- 23 million people -- don't have access. In Pew surveys, those who live in rural areas were about twice as likely not to use the internet as urban or suburban Americans.

In Saguache County download speeds of 12 Mbps (with an upload speed of 2 Mbps) cost $90 a month, and the article points out that when it comes to providing broadband, "small companies and cooperatives are going it more or less alone, without much help yet from the federal government." But that raises an inevitable question. Should the federal government be subsidizing rural internet access?

9 of 315 comments (clear)

  1. universal service fund by Spazmania · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Before Clinton converted it in to a "laptops for schools" program, the Universal Service Fund was used to fund telephone lines in rural America where the cost was too high. It worked: telephones became ubiquitous. The Universal Service Fund should be restored to its original purpose with the simple tweak: fund the initial builds for broadband Internet access in rural America.

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    Moderating "-1, Disagree" is simple censorship. Have the guts to post your opinion.
    1. Re:universal service fund by GerryGilmore · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You're already at +5, so my mod point won't matter. Therefore, I'll burn the ability to mod to say: Right On! In the same way that: railroads, then the telegraph, paved roads, electricity and - to your comment - telephone service were always rightfully seen as ways to use public money to yield a much greater public good, expanding internet access to all areas is Good(TM). While some yokels may chortle about faster porn, the reality is that NO business will voluntarily locate to an area without decent internet access today. This deprives those areas of an equal opportunity to gain new jobs and grow their economy. As a people, we are not slow learners, just very fast forgetters.

  2. No... by Gravis+Zero · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They should fine the shit out of the telcos who took billions in subsidies to provide broadband to the nation and then reneged on their end of the deal.

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    Anons need not reply. Questions end with a question mark.
    1. Re:No... by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Do not only fine them, also cut their tax breaks and everything else that's money-related.

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      #DeleteFacebook
  3. Re:Isolation by Euroranger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I'm sure you'll take equal comfort in that notion should they decide to stop shipping food to you in whatever city it is that you infest, right? I mean, you decided to live way the heck out in the middle of a city to enjoy the fruits of civilization but now want food? Why? See how that works? That said, the government funding something is the worst way to go. They should encourage the existing electric providers (who already have infrastructure in those areas) to add internet access via BPL/PLC. The technology exists, much of the infrastructure is already there...give them lowered tax rates or whatever. However, at base, the government shouldn't have an interest in providing internet access to citizens. It's not a fundamental need (despite what city folk think would happen to their lives if they were without net access for more than an hour). The government can serve a community purpose but needs to encourage the private sector to step up and do it.

  4. Free Speech Matters A Lot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In a country where you die from illness if you're not rich, Internet should not be your priority.

    Incorrect. Internet as a critical means of Free Speech is how you communicate the inefficiencies and corruptions of your society to the rest of it. Having a hearable voice to speak truth to power, and reveal injustice, is much more important than focusing on optimizing your healthcare within the existing inefficient/corrupt system.

    Free Speech is the beginning of fixing the bigger problems. The Internet should be about Free Speech.

  5. No. by argStyopa · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not the FEDERAL government, certainly. States can enact policies supported by their individual populations however.

    People aren't MANDATED to live in rural areas.
    If they do, one of the 'sacrifices' they have to make is shitty internet service.

    I'm reminded of the bullshit limousine liberals who moved out to western Montana for the low prices, splendid vistas, lack of congestion, and privacy...and then bitched the first winter because the power occasionally went out and nobody came to clear the snow from their 2 mile driveways.

    Life's a series of tradeoffs. It's not the federal government's role to build safety nets for people.

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    -Styopa
  6. Re:Isolation by vux984 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It's not a fundamental need (despite what city folk think would happen to their lives if they were without net access for more than an hour).

    I disagree. The internet should be considered a basic need.

    It enables communication and participation in civil and political discourse, and facilitates the spread of ideas. And in a society where some have it and some don't the have-nots are missing out on a principle means of participating in government.

    It is also fast becoming the principle means of consuming government services, and accessing government documents. Making inquiries, filing documents, etc.

    Further, it facilitates economic development, by providing an avenue for commerce -- from connecting people with jobs, to being able to source goods and services.

    Finally, it betters social welfare though the availability of information -- from being able to use it to figure out if that spider that just bit you was a brown recluse or a wolf spider. From being able to read up on troubleshooting your furnace, or a tear down guide for your laptop, to how to grow tomatoes, or gut a fish, research a solar installation. etc...

    Government should absolutely be treating internet access like a public utility, and striving to make it available to everyone.