My rudimentary logic tells me that the Internet has become a critical part of our lives: employment, finances, medical information, national security, general information, weather and earthquake alerts, -- you name it, and people are becoming increasingly dependent on the Internet for almost every part of our lives.
Having affordable, fast Internet access for everyone is not a bad thing.
As the problems are identified (shiny satellites interfering with ground-based observatories), they can be addressed (new non-reflective coating to eliminate the shininess).
Having a knee-jerk reaction to space satellites based on a SUN article? How punny!

Most big money astronomy is not done in Visible light.
so reflectors are a just a "shut the dumb fvcks up"
That is a very small part of the spectrum of energy
we seek to observe, most I know of is in IR and Lower
wavelengths.
Visible light only tells you what it looks like, not what it
is made of.
Although I made my living for a time in the Astronomy
industry in Hawaii, I think it is a waste as it does not improve
the human condition( other than jobs and vocations)
The Internet does improve peoples lives.
That is more important than the Black hole in the center
of our Galaxy, or that the Galaxy Andromeda
is going to collide with ours in 5 billion years or so.
Our sun isn't going to last that long.
So much for "renewable: energy.
World wide inexpensive Internet.
I'm all for it!
Full disclosure;
My internet is satellite now.
$85 per month.
No land lines, all off a bird 22,000 miles away.