Wired Internet Leaving Hispanics Behind
WASHINGTON & SANTA
FE, NM (By
,
NYT)
December 5 2011 ―
For
the second year in a
row, the Monday
after Thanksgiving —
so-called Cyber
Monday, when online
retailers offer
discounts to lure
holiday shoppers —
was the biggest
sales day of the
year, totaling some
$1.25 billion and
overwhelming the
sales figures racked
up by
brick-and-mortar
stores three days
before, on Black
Friday, the former
perennial
record-holder.
Such numbers may
seem proof that
America is,
indeed, online.
But they mask an
emerging
division, one
that has
worrisome
implications for
our economy and
society.
Increasingly, we
are a country in
which only the
urban and
suburban
well-off have
truly high-speed
Internet access,
while the rest —
the poor and the
working class —
either cannot
afford access or
use restricted
wireless access
as their only
connection to
the Internet. As
our jobs,
entertainment,
politics and
even health care
move online,
millions are at
risk of being
left behind.
Telecommunications,
which in theory
should bind us
together, has
often divided us
in practice.
Until the late
20th century,
the divide split
those with phone
access and those
without it. Then
it was the Web:
in 1995 the
Commerce
Department
published its
first look at
the “digital
divide,” finding
stark racial,
economic and
geographic gaps
between those
who could get
online and those
who could not.
“While a
standard
telephone line
can be an
individual’s
pathway to the
riches of the
Information
Age,” the report
said, “a
personal
computer and
modem are
rapidly becoming
the keys to the
vault.” If you
were white,
middle-class and
urban, the
Internet was
opening untold
doors of
information and
opportunity. If
you were poor,
rural or a
member of a
minority group,
you were fast
being left
behind. Over the last
decade, cheap
Web access over
phone lines
brought millions
to the Internet.
But in recent
years the
emergence of
services like
video-on-demand,
online medicine
and Internet
classrooms have
redefined the
state of the
art: they
require
reliable, truly
high-speed
connections, the
kind available
almost
exclusively from
the nation’s
small number of
very powerful
cable companies.
Such access
means expensive
contracts, which
many Americans
simply cannot
afford. While we
still talk about
“the” Internet,
we increasingly
have two
separate access
marketplaces:
high-speed wired
and second-class
wireless.
High-speed
access is a
superhighway for
those who can
afford it, while
racial
minorities and
poorer and rural
Americans must
make do with a
bike path. Just over 200
million
Americans have
high-speed,
wired Internet
access at home,
and almost
two-thirds of
them get it
through their
local cable
company. The
connections are
truly
high-speed:
based on a
technological
standard called
Docsis 2.0 or
3.0, they can
reach up to 105
megabits per
second, fast
enough to
download a music
album in three
seconds. These
customers are
the targets for
the next
generation of
Internet
services,
technology that
will greatly
enhance their
careers,
education and
quality of life.
Within a decade,
patients at home
will be able to
speak with their
doctors online
and thus get
access to
lower-cost,
higher-quality
care. High-speed
connections will
also allow for
distance
education
through
real-time
videoconferencing;
already,
thousands of
high school
students are
earning diplomas
via virtual
classrooms. Households
will soon be
able to monitor
their energy use
via smart-grid
technology to
keep costs and
carbon dioxide
emissions down.
Even the way
that wired
America works
will change:
many job
applications are
already possible
only online;
soon, job
interviews will
be held by way
of
videoconference,
saving cost and
time. But the rest
of America will
most likely be
left out of all
this. Millions
are still
offline
completely,
while others can
afford only
connections over
their phone
lines or via
wireless smart
phones. They can
thus expect even
lower-quality
health services,
career
opportunities,
education and
entertainment
options than
they already
receive. True,
Americans of all
stripes are
adopting smart
phones at
breakneck
speeds; in just
over four years
the number has
jumped from
about 10 percent
to about 35
percent; among
Hispanics and
African-Americans,
it’s roughly 44
percent. Most of
the time, smart
phone owners
also have wired
access at home:
the Pew Internet
and American
Life Project
recently
reported that 59
percent of
American adults
with incomes
above $75,000
had a smart
phone, and a
2010 study by
the Federal
Communications
Commission found
that more than
90 percent of
people at that
income level had
wired high-speed
Internet access
at home. But that is
not true for
lower-income and
minority
Americans.
According to
numbers released
last month by
the Department
of Commerce, a
mere 4 out of
every 10
households with
annual household
incomes below
$25,000 in 2010
reported having
wired Internet
access at home,
compared with
the vast
majority — 93
percent — of
households with
incomes
exceeding
$100,000. Only
slightly more
than half of all
African-American
and Hispanic
households (55
percent and 57
percent,
respectively)
have wired
Internet access
at home,
compared with 72
percent of
whites. These numbers
are likely to
grow even
starker as the
30 percent of
Americans
without any kind
of Internet
access come
online. When
they do,
particularly if
the next several
years deliver
subpar growth in
personal income,
they will
probably go for
the only option
that is at all
within their
reach: wireless
smart phones. A
wired high-speed
Internet plan
might cost $100
a month; a smart
phone plan might
cost half that,
often with a
free or heavily
discounted phone
thrown in. The problem
is that smart
phone access is
not a substitute
for wired. The
vast majority of
jobs require
online
applications,
but it is hard
to type up a
résumé on a
hand-held
device; it is
hard to get a
college degree
from a remote
location using
wireless. Few
people would
start a business
using only a
wireless
connection. It is not
just
inconvenient —
many of these
activities are
physically
impossible via a
wireless
connection. By
their nature,
the airwaves
suffer from
severe capacity
limitations: the
same five
gigabytes of
data that might
take nine
minutes to
download over a
high-speed cable
connection would
take an hour and
15 minutes to
travel over a
wireless
connection. Even if a
smart phone had
the technical
potential to
compete with
wired, users
would still be
hampered by the
monthly data
caps put in
place by AT&T
and Verizon, by
far the largest
wireless
carriers in
America. For
example, well
before finishing
the download of
a single
two-hour,
high-definition
movie from
iTunes over a 4G
wireless
network, a
typical
subscriber would
hit his or her
monthly cap and
start incurring
$10 per gigabyte
in overage
charges. If you
think this is a
frivolous
concern, for
“movie” insert
an equally large
data stream,
like “business
meeting.” Public
libraries are
taking up the
slack and
buckling under
the strain.
Nearly half of
librarians say
that their
connections are
insufficient to
meet patrons’
needs. And it is
hard to imagine
conducting a job
interview in a
library. IN the past,
the cost of new
technologies has
dropped over
time, and
eventually many
Americans could
afford a
computer and a
modem to access
a standard phone
line. Phone
service —
something 96
percent of
Americans have —
was sold at
regulated rates
and the phone
companies were
forced to allow
competing
Internet access
providers to
share their
lines. But there is
reason to
believe this
time is
different.
Today, the
problem is about
affording
unregulated
high-speed
Internet service
— provided, in
the case of
cable, by a few
for-profit
companies with
very little
local
competition and
almost no check
on their prices.
They have to
bear all the
cost of
infrastructure
and so have no
incentive to
expand into
rural areas,
where potential
customers are
relatively few
and far between.
(The Federal
Communications
Commission
recently
announced a plan
to convert
subsidies that
once supported
basic rural
telephone
services into
subsidies for
basic Internet
access.) The bigger
problem is the
lack of
competition in
cable markets.
Though there are
several large
cable companies
nationwide, each
dominates its
own fragmented
kingdom of local
markets: Comcast
is the only game
in Philadelphia,
while Time
Warner dominates
Cleveland. That
is partly
because it is so
expensive to lay
down the
physical cables,
and companies,
having paid for
those networks,
guard them
jealously,
clustering their
operations and
spending tens of
millions of
dollars to lobby
against laws
that might
oblige them to
share their
infrastructure.
Cable’s only
real competition
comes from
Verizon’s FiOS
fiber-optic
service, which
can provide
speeds up to 150
megabits per
second. But FiOS
is available to
only about 10
percent of
households.
AT&T’s U-verse,
which has about
4 percent of the
market, cannot
provide
comparable
speeds because,
while it uses
fiber-optic
cable to reach
neighborhoods,
the signal
switches to
slower copper
lines to connect
to houses. And
don’t even think
about DSL, which
carries just a
fraction of the
data needed to
handle the
services that
cable users take
for granted. Lacking
competition from
other cable
companies or
alternate
delivery
technologies,
each of the
country’s large
cable
distributors has
the ability to
raise prices in
its region for
high-speed
Internet
services. Those
who can still
afford it are
paying higher
and higher rates
for the same
quality of
service, while
those who cannot
are turning to
wireless. IT doesn’t
have to be this
way, as a
growing number
of countries
demonstrate. The
Organization for
Economic
Cooperation and
Development
ranks America
12th among
developed
nations for
wired Internet
access, and it
is safe to
assume that high
prices have
played a role in
lowering our
standing. So
America, the
country that
invented the
Internet and
still leads the
world in
telecommunications
innovation, is
lagging far
behind in actual
use of that
technology. The answer to
this puzzle is
regulatory
policy. Over the
last 10 years,
we have
deregulated
high-speed
Internet access
in the hope that
competition
among providers
would protect
consumers. The
result? We now
have neither a
functioning
competitive
market for
high-speed wired
Internet access
nor government
oversight. By contrast,
governments that
have intervened
in high-speed
Internet markets
have seen higher
numbers of
people adopting
the technology,
doing so earlier
and at lower
subscription
charges. Many of
these countries
have required
telecommunications
providers to
sell access to
parts of their
networks to
competitors at
regulated rates,
so that
competition can
lower prices.
Meanwhile,
they are working
toward, or
already have,
fiber-optic
networks that
will be
inexpensive,
standardized,
ubiquitous and
equally fast for
uploading and
downloading.
Many of those
countries, not
only advanced
ones like Sweden
and Japan but
also
less-developed
ones like
Portugal and
Russia, are
already well on
their way to
wholly replacing
their standard
telephone
connections with
state-of-the-art
fiber-optic
connections that
will even
further reduce
the cost to
users, while
significantly
improving access
speeds. The only
thing close is
FiOS. But,
according to
Diffraction
Analysis, a
research firm,
it costs six
times as much as
comparable
service in Hong
Kong, five times
as much as in
Paris and two
and a half times
as much as in
Amsterdam. When
it comes to the
retail cost of
fiber access in
America, we do
about as well as
Istanbul. The new
digital divide
raises important
questions about
social equity in
an
information-driven
world. But it is
also a matter of
protecting our
economic future.
Thirty years
from now,
African-Americans
and Latinos, who
are at the
greatest risk of
being left
behind in the
Internet
revolution, will
be more than
half of our work
force. If we
want to be
competitive in
the global
economy, we need
to make sure
every American
has truly
high-speed wired
access to the
Internet for a
reasonable cost.









