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Should The Government Fix Slow Internet Access?

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?


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