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The Internet hasn't reeled in everyone yet (The next entitlement)
Christian Science Monitor ^ | 12/29/03 | Gregory M. Lamb

Posted on 12/31/2003 7:05:07 AM PST by Holly_P

Once it was edgy and cool. Now the Internet has settled down into a comfortable middle age and become merely ... indispensible.

After spiking in the 1990s and early 2000s, the percentage of adult Americans online has leveled off in the past two years at 63 percent, says a new study from the Pew Internet & American Life Project. That percentage is expected eventually to rise, but not as quickly as some had imagined.

"It's no longer the case that the Internet population is growing by leaps and bounds," says Lee Rainie, director of the Pew project. However, "the Internet is eventually going to become as important and universal a technology as telephones and televisions are now."

Ninety-four percent of American homes today have telephones; 98 percent have TVs. "The Internet is eventually going to get to that level," he predicts, "but it's going to take at least 10 years - or maybe even 15 or 20."

Earlier polls showed skyrocketing growth in the use of the Internet. A 1995 survey found just 14 percent of Americans were online. But by March 2000 Pew showed 46 percent of American adults using the Internet.

While the percentages held even in 2002-2003, the just-released study did find that the majority of Americans who are online are using it more and more. "[Al]most any given activity we ask about - from e-mail to downloading music to seeking religious information online - has increased in the years since the project has existed," the report found.

Internet watchers aren't surprised by the findings.

"I see this as a relatively natural point in the Internet's adoption in the US and a sign that the Internet has become a mature technology," says Steve Jones, a communications professor at the University of Illinois Chicago who has followed the development of the Internet for more than two decades. Many of those who aren't online are in the low-income bracket, he adds. Buying a $500 computer and spending $20 a month for Internet service just isn't in their budget.

That raises the question of whether the much-talked-about "digital divide" between those online and those not is closing. The Pew findings show that the poor and less-educated are online less than the affluent. Among Americans with less than a high school education, Internet usage dropped from 31 percent in January 2002 to 26 percent in August 2003, the report says.

Of those who don't use the Internet, at least one third, or about 10 percent of all adult Americans, would be online if they could, says Donna Hoffman, an Internet researcher at Vanderbilt University in Nashville, Tenn.

"There would be more growth if only there were programs or opportunities for people who can't afford it," she says. "The Internet is clearly indispensible now, and when you have a technology that's indispensible, there's no question there's a role for the government in taking a look at what happens when people don't have that access ... and what are the implications of that."

Some people who can afford the technology aren't sure the benefits of being online outweigh the perceived drawbacks.

Older Americans especially "read about really awful human beings online and really awful content online, pornographers and ugly stuff," Mr. Rainie says. "[They] hear about people who are cheated online, about stalkers, [and ask] why should I invite this into my home?"

The Pew report says those who are online find plenty they want to do, from sending e-mail to seeking online information on everything from health to sports to international news.

And they're buying things.

"[W]e have seen approximately 5 million new households shop online since 2001," e-mails Carrie Johnson, an analyst at Forrester Research in Cambridge, Mass.

So far, shopping online hasn't been affected by the Internet's stagnant growth, and Ms. Johnson doesn't expect it to be anytime soon. "Growth in online sales won't slow down considerably, since those people that were already shopping online continue to shift more purchases to the Web as they get comfortable shopping online," she says.

One key barrier slowing Internet growth is the lack of broadband connections in some areas, says Phillipa Gamse, an e-business strategy consultant in Santa Cruz, Calif. Broadband allows users to move around the Internet faster, doesn't tie up the phone line, and, perhaps most important, can be left on all the time, like other appliances.

"Broadband is enormously important," Jones says, because it makes the Internet easy to use. People "start to treat it more like the telephone or TV. They stop talking about 'going online' ... one's always online, in some sense."

Internet by the numbers • About a quarter of Americans have never been online.

• More than 75 percent of Americans between the ages of 12 and 17 use the Internet.

• Young Internet users like instant messaging and downloading music. Older Americans more often seek health information and material at government websites.

• The most popular online activity is sending e-mail.

• In August 2003 66 million Americans were online on a typical day.


TOPICS: Culture/Society
KEYWORDS: digitaldivide; internet
"There would be more growth if only there were programs or opportunities for people who can't afford it," she says. "The Internet is clearly indispensible now, and when you have a technology that's indispensible, there's no question there's a role for the government in taking a look at what happens when people don't have that access ... and what are the implications of that."

Hold onto to your hat, we are about to be taken for a ride on the next entitlement train. Poor people gotta have the net too and guess who pays?

1 posted on 12/31/2003 7:05:07 AM PST by Holly_P
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To: Graybeard58
Ping
2 posted on 12/31/2003 7:12:21 AM PST by Holly_P
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To: Holly_P
Among Americans with less than a high school education, Internet usage dropped from 31 percent in January 2002 to 26 percent in August 2003, the report says.
 
This probably explains why DU has only about 1/10th the traffic that FreeRepublic has.

Owl_Eagle

”Guns Before Butter.”

3 posted on 12/31/2003 7:15:45 AM PST by End Times Sentinel ("Fire can be our servant, whether it's toasting S'mores or raining down on Charlie" –Ppl Skinner)
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To: Holly_P

Indispensible? Hardly.

But why the hell should someone get for free what I gotta pay for?

Oh, right. Soviet America. Gotcha.

4 posted on 12/31/2003 7:17:49 AM PST by Eris
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To: Holly_P
Reminds me of Bill Clinton's pathetic attempt to get support for his 1993 economic stimulus bill by howling about how "Republican opposition to this bill will mean that 10% of American children are not vaccinated, and will not receive their vaccinations this year."

I believe it was Rush Limbaugh who pointed out that free vaccinations were already covered in another Federal program, and that 10% of American children were not vaccinated because their parents were too stupid and/or too lazy to bring their children to the local clinic for their free vaccines.

This, along with the idiotic "midnight basketball" programs that made for endless satire and stand-up comedy material, were the major reasons why that proposed 1993 bill never got passed.

5 posted on 12/31/2003 7:20:47 AM PST by Alberta's Child (Alberta -- the TRUE North strong and free.)
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To: Holly_P
Poor people should get off their asses and go to the library. Isn't it enough we pay for their phones service?
6 posted on 12/31/2003 7:23:07 AM PST by petercooper (DEAN = Democrats Experiencing Another Nightmare)
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To: Holly_P
[They] hear about people who are cheated online

I hear about seniors giving significant portions of their life savings to guys that show up at their doors selling home repairs or some get-rich-quick scheme. Where? On the internet, of course.

7 posted on 12/31/2003 7:35:46 AM PST by laredo44 (liberty is not the problem)
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To: Eris
But why the hell should someone get for free what I gotta pay for? Oh, right. Soviet America. Gotcha.

And it's being supported right here on FR: take a look

8 posted on 12/31/2003 7:44:13 AM PST by Sir Gawain
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