Microsoft president: ‘Shame on us if we fail' to provide broadband internet to more Americans

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Our broadband system needs help. Americans have vastly different abilities to get online or to connect at decent speeds, depending on where they live.

The problem is acute in rural areas but also an issue in cities where certain neighborhoods, often those populated by communities of color, can have far worse connections than people living just a few miles away.

And the stay-at-home orders during the pandemic highlighted the problem, as employees worked remotely and children took classes over Zoom. Congress has been trying to help with billions already allocated to improve internet access. By Sept. 27, the House of Representatives will vote on a bipartisan infrastructure bill that could allot another $65 billion to improve broadband access.

But more money won't necessarily solve a basic problem: Nobody in Washington or the private sector appears to know precisely which areas of the U.S. need better broadband access.

“We have the wherewithal as a country to solve this problem in the next four years,” Microsoft (MSFT) President Brad Smith told Yahoo Finance Live during an interview this week, referring to the need to improve internet access. “I would almost say shame on us if we fail."

A screenshot of the The Federal Communication Commission's current
A screenshot of the the Federal Communication Commission's current "broadband deployment" map (FCC.gov)

‘We've been banging this drum for several years’

Microsoft is just one of the many groups outside of Washington trying to at least understand the scope of the problem.

The company has published maps showing the digital access divide may be worse than we think. Government data shows that around 14.5 million Americans don’t have any access to broadband. But Microsoft’s internal data finds a much larger swath of Americans — about 120.4 million people — don’t currently use the internet at broadband speeds, defined as download speeds of 25 mbps and upload speeds of 3 mbps.

“We've been banging this drum for several years,” Smith says of his company’s efforts to improve broadband connectivity in underserved areas, touting their creation of “the preeminent map of the United States in terms of just enabling people to see who has broadband and who does not.”

Other companies have their own efforts. A company called Lightbox has detailed new maps coming out just this week built upon real estate data. Some state governments have also undertaken efforts to see how connected their own citizens actually are.

President of Microsoft Brad Smith speaks in front of a Microsoft logo as the company announces plans to be carbon negative by 2030 and to negate all the direct carbon emissions ever made by the company by 2050 at their campus in Redmond, Washington, U.S., January 16, 2020. REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson
President of Microsoft Brad Smith speaks during an event at Microsoft's headquarters in Redmond, Washington in January 2020. (REUTERS/Lindsey Wasson) · Lindsey Wasson / reuters

But most agree that Washington will have to do its part to solve the problem. Vickie Robinson, the general manager at Microsoft’s Airband Initiative, told Congress earlier that year that Washington will hopefully build on Microsoft’s work and “pave the way to accurately identify and address existing gaps in broadband coverage.”