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Understanding & Use of the Internet (UUI) Digital Divide Spring 2012. Goals and Themes . Who uses the Internet? Global digital divide Adoption and misuse Non-use Design for use Social Exclusion Digital Divide Policy. What is Digital Divide?. Digital Divide.
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Understanding & Use of the Internet (UUI) Digital Divide Spring 2012
Goals and Themes • Who uses the Internet? • Global digital divide • Adoption and misuse • Non-use • Design for use • Social Exclusion • Digital Divide • Policy
Digital Divide • Digital divide can be classified as access divide and social digital divide. • Access digital divide is the gap between people who have access to digital infrastructure and information and those who have no or limited access. • Social digital divide exist due to perception, culture, and interpersonal relationships
Digital Divide (2) • Access Divide: • E-service access • Resource availability and convenience of access to service • E-service access quality • Timeliness (speed), Trust, and Stability of the service • E-service access Skills • Technical and applied e-skills for using the service • Social Divide: • E-service Awareness • Knowledge of the services availability • E-service Social Support • Technical assistance and emotional reinforcement from friends and family • E-service Culturability • National colors, pictures, and local language Khan et al., 2010,
Digital Participation • The Digital Britain report of June 2009 set out its definition of digital participation as follows: • Increasing the reach, breadth and depth of digital technology use across all sections of society, to maximize digital participation and the economic and social benefits it can bring. • www.culture.gov.uk/images/publications/digitalbritain-finalreport-jun09.pdf
How can digital participation be measured? • The Digital Britain report stated that the following metrics were critical for the evaluation of activity to promote digital participation: • 1) Reach: • Access: number of households online, and numbers using the Internet outside the home; • 2) Breadth of engagement: • Modes of usage and consumption (communication, retail, content consumed, public services used);
How can digital participation be measured? • 3) Depth of engagement: user contributions, comments, joining networks, user generated content, self publishing, content creation, photos uploaded and shared, etc; and • 4) Social and economic impact: particularly the impact on economic recovery and benefits for disadvantaged groups and communities
Digital Divide May be due to.. • Economic division, • Geographical Division, or • Social division http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sjfAFsET28c&NR=1
Why people adopt a technology? • Why people don’t adopt a technology?
Factors Affecting Adoption (1) Technological perspective • From adoption and usage perspective, research has identified several factors that affect e-service adoption for instant • Trust • Quality (info, system, and service) • Compatibility of the service • Ease of use • Relative advantage • etc
Factors Affecting Adoption (2) • Social perspective: • Motivations • Resources • Voluntary or obliged adoption (peers pressure) • Consumer research point of view: • Functional: they do something practical • Experimental: they provide sensual pleasure • Identity: products provide expression of self identity • Social and individual context • Network effects • Some innovation have more use as more people have them – slow to start, then much fast uptake a ‘inflection point’
Use/Adoption Factors • Correlates with: • Income e.g.. High GDP more internet use • Age and Life stage • Region • Professional activity • Education • Sex • Ability/Disability • Capital/Wealth • Family with children • Culture etc
Non-use of ICT • The Enhanced Barrier Model • Resource Barriers • No access, No money, No time or space, No contact with technology • Relevance Barriers • Not relevant, No need, Not part of everyday life, Other more important ways of using resources • Symbolic and Subjective Barriers • Disapprove of technology or industry, Dislike technology, Feel uncomfortable with ICT use, Ignore technology • Knowledge Barriers • Do not know about the innovation, Do not know how to adopt, how to use, how to cope with problems or how to innovate activities. • Why people don’t adopt • “Not relevant”,”no use” • “Too complicated”, “too tricky” • Practical, experiential, identity factors • Physical barriers • Subjective reactions • No resources • No motivation • No community
Non-user strategies • Resistors, Delayers, and Rejectors • How to overcome the barriers: • ‘Reduce the barriers’ • Need triggers to use • These come from other changes in life
World-wide Statistics http://www.internetworldstats.com/stats.htm
How can we over come DD? We need.. • Economic incentives • E.g. to buy computers (laptops) • To have internet connection at home • Public access to computers • User friendly spaces - cybercafes, telecentres, • E.g. public libraries, free internet access points
Hw can we over come DD? • Provide skills (e.g. The European Computer Driving Licence (ECDL) • Local experts - change agents • Free computers+ for whole communities • Government-industry partnerships • E.g. One laptop per child project
How can we over come DD? • Donors • Provide Education, telecentres, etc • Donate old computers to less developed countries • Liberalisation • Foreign investment • Infrastructure - Mobile phones • New markets • Industry (outsourcing)
Questions • Is the digital divide an important factor in social exclusion? • What policies can help promote adoption? • Does technology adoption really lead to social inclusion?
Global Digital Divide: Problems • Irrelevance of the Internet • To expensive, no electricity, no skills etc • Better things to spend money on: • Health, water, food, roads, education • Problem of government control and corruption
Problems • Access • Resources (time, money, experience, social network) • Literacy and Skills • Basic literacy • Information age literacy • Motivation • Social and individual issues • Life-stage • We can remove barriers, but not create motivations
Result-> ‘Digital’ exclusion • Poor Jobs • Limited Government services (e-government) • Limited Information (jobs, consumer, politics) • Few Consumer benefits (cost of not shopping online) • Isolation from new culture • New excluded groups - older men • Digital exclusion intensifies as society and the economy become increasingly based on the Internet
Never Catch up • Many interlocking issues. • Always new technologies • Increased commercialisation • Are the forerunner opening up the gap?
References • Martin, Michael J.C. (1994). Managing Innovation and Entrepreneurship in Technology-based Firms. Wiley-IEEE. p. 44. ISBN 0471572195. • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Technology