Title: The Digital Divide
1The Digital Divide
- Dissenting Arguments
- By
- Ife Afolayan, Jackie Eisner, Farayi Mafoti, Youyi
Hwang
2Position
- The public should not subsidize computer and/or
Internet access for underserved areas and
communities.
3Response to Affirmatives
- Poverty Argument
- Their Argument Subsidizing digital technology
for under severed areas will reduce poverty. - Our Argument
- - Providing digital technology/internet access to
under served communities does not address the
root cause of poverty and inequality. Money
should be spent addressing the more immediate
concerns of education, access to public
healthcare, proper nutrition, housing, and
unemployment.
4Response to Affirmatives
- Economic Argument
- Their Argument The digital divide prohibits
already poverty stricken countries from competing
in the increasingly digital national and global
economy. - Our Argument
- Capitalism We live in a capitalistic society and
therefore it would be impossible for us to
operate under a completely equal and socialist
global market. The global market system would
completely collapse if some inequality did not
exist. - Not all world economies necessarily need to be
connected to the larger global (digital) economy
in order to function or sustain themselves.
5Response To Affirmatives
- Terrorism Argument
- Their Argument There is a correlation between
communities left in the Internet-Technology boom
and terrorism - Our Argument
- Allowing so many new users on the internet with
access to new technologies may increase hacking
and or/ identity theft. - We are not contending that people in poorer
communities are likely to commit identity theft.
However there is evidence of this occurring. - Case in Tula, Russia A group of poor students
became notorious computer hackers. Russian
economist William Knowles in a statement
concerning the Russian economic crisis and how it
leads people to hacking and piracy stated think
of poor people in (the central city of) Tula,
students who have no prospects, then you can
understand why (they turn to hacking and software
piracy).
6Response to Affirmatives
- Terrorism Argument Continued
- With their limited knowledge of internet
security, individuals from underserved/poorer
communities might become easy targets for
parasites. -
- Unfortunately ,privacy and anonymity also can be
exploited to facilitate unwanted and undesirable
computer-aided activities in cyberspace, such as
money laundering, drug trading, terrorism, or
preying upon the vulnerable (Marx, Gary T.(2001)
"Identity and Anonymity Some Conceptual
Distinctions and Issues for Research"). - So, in a sense, terrorist acts might be
PERPETUATED by subsidizing internet access. - Can the other side present an argument that
proves that there is cost effective, expedient
way to inculcate underserved people around
theglobe with knowledge about keeping their
technologies safe and secure?
7Response to Affirmatives
- Inequality Argument
- Their Argument Lack of computer/internet
technology foments socioeconomic inequalities - Our Argument
- The increasing prevalence and usage of
computers/computer technology in our society is
in and of itself a growing cause of inequality. - Low skilled workers are losing their jobs to
computers/being given lower wages while computer
technicians/specialists/developers and others in
lucrative computer professions are experiencing
increases in their wages as the demand for
digital technology and computer skill increases. - Katz, Lawrence. Technological Change,
Computerization, and Wage Structure. Harvard
University The National Buruea of Economic
Research. 1999.
8Dissenting Arguments
9The Implementation of Programs to Provide Digital
Services is Not Feasible
- What does lessening the divide mean? Giving
households their own computer and dedicated
broadband access 24 hours a day? - How are we defining underserved areas and
communities? - In other words, how can we impartially establish
a basis to provide for people who are in need of
internet access and computational services in
general? - Superficially "undeserved" can mean the poorer
neighborhoods in cites, but how about villages in
the middle of Africa or China? Farmers/herders
in many rural areas may not have not much use
for the Internet and computers. Apart from
entertainment, they are less likely to make use
of these technologies to the fullest potential.
Pendent\ Asking the supporters to claify their
argument first. What does lessening the divide
mean? Giving households their own computer and
dedicated broadband access 24 hours a day? What
does gt underserved areas and communities mean?
In other words, how can we impartially establish
a basis to provide for people who are in need of
internet access and computational services in
general? Superficially "undeserved" can mean the
poorer neighborhoods in cites, but how about
villages in the middle of Africa or China?
10The Implementation of Programs to Provide Digital
Services is Not Feasible
- There is no cost effective way to provide
services to all under served areas. - Infrastructure has to be set up, computers will
have to be built/maintained, people will have to
be trained to become computer literate. - The costs of man hours, infrastructure and
technology would be huge and is unlikely to be
feasible. - Given the limited bandwidth now, it is
questionable if the Internet would be able to
support the increased traffic. - In other words, our opponents are arguing the
benefits of an egalitarian global market without
giving suggestions as to how it will be made
possible.
11Technological Determinism is Faulty Logic
- "Technological Determinism"- a concept often
endorsed by proponents of the digital divide is
based on the idea that "the mere presence of
technology leads to familiar and standard
applications of that technology which in turn
bring about social change".
? -
- Warschauer, Mark. "Demystifying the Digital
Divide." Scientific America Aug 2003, Vol.
289 Issue 2, p42, 6p, 2c.
12Technological Determinism Continued
- The mere presence of computers will not generate
learning or development. Without proper
instruction, their presence can actually be
counter productive. - An overemphasis on hardware with scant
attention paid to the pedagogical and curricular
frameworks that shape how the computers are used
is common in educational technology projects
throughout the world. - Technology must be considered within a specific
context that includes hardware, software, support
resources, infrastructure, as well as people in
various roles and relationships with one another
and with other elements of the system. And the
technology and social system continuously shape
each other, like a biological community and its
environment. - Warschauer, Mark. "Demystifying the Digital
Divide." Scientific America Aug 2003, Vol.
289 Issue 2, p42, 6p, 2c.
13Case Study
- IN 1999 THE MUNICIPAL government of New Delhi, in
collaboration with the Indian National Institute
of Information Technology, launched an experiment
to provide computer access to children in one of
the city's poorest areas. They set up set up an
outdoor kiosk with several computer stations. The
computers, with dialup Internet access, were
inside a locked booth, but the monitors,
joysticks and buttons stuck out through holes and
were accessible. In line with a concept known as
minimally invasive education, the test included
no teachers or instructors. - The program did not yield the type of results
that were expected Internet connection seldom
functioned. The architecture of the kiosk--based
on a wall instead of a room--made instruction or
collaboration difficult. Over the nine-month
duration of the experiment, the youngsters did
indeed learn how to manipulate the joystick and
buttons. But without educational programs and
with the content primarily in English rather than
Hindi, they mostly did what you might expect
played games and used paint programs to draw.
Neighborhood parents felt ambivalent. Several
embraced the initiative, but most expressed
concern about the lack of organized instruction.
Some even complained that the computer was
detrimental. "My son used to be doing very well
in school," one parent said, "but now he spends
all his free time playing computer games at the
kiosk, and his schoolwork is suffering." In
short, the community came to realize that
minimally invasive education was, in practice,
minimally effective education. - Warschauer, Mark. "Demystifying the Digital
Divide." Scientific America Aug 2003, Vol.
289 Issue 2, p42, 6p, 2c.
14Education
- The introduction of computers and computer based
technologies to underserved areas is useless
without the proper technical training to go with
it. - If the government is to subsidize internet
services to poor communities, it must also
provide them with the background needed to
utilize these technologies the process of
subsidizing becomes more arduous and less cost
effective when the government not only has to
provide the services, but also has to make sure
that people have the competence to use these
services in order to better themselves and their
communities.
15Not Everyone Wants, Needs, or Uses Internet and
Computer Technology
- "A little under one-third of U.S. households have
no Internet access and do not plan to get it,
with most of the hold-outs seeing little use for
it in their lives, according to a new survey.
Park Associates, a Dallas-based technology market
research firm, said 29 percent of U.S.
households, or 31 million homes, do not have
Internet access and do not intend to subscribe to
an Internet service over the next 12 months"
(Reuters). - People use computers for different things and in
different capacities and many people do not use
computers at all. - There are millions in our country alone that are
unwilling to acquire Internet services. Even if
these people are somehow persuaded that Internet
use is to their benefit, do we have the bandwidth
to support this?
? - Reuters Article CNN.com ? http//www.cnn.com/2007
/TECH/internet/03/26/internet.holdouts.reut/index.
html
16Bandwidth
- Europe, a continent comprised of many developed
nations, is suffering from limited connectivity
and is having problems ensuring that all of its
constituent users are getting the Internet access
that they're paying for. Is it not reasonable to
assume that a developing nation would suffer more
from these issues, given its lack of
infrastructure and technological advancement. - Can we even establish dependable servers in these
nations if more developed nations are struggling
with this issue? Moreover, given the limited
bandwidth now, it is questionable if the Internet
would be able to support the increased traffic. - Eisner, Adam. Placing Blame For Europes Limited
Bandwidth. Web Host Industry News
lthttp//www.thewhir.com/features/placingblame.cfmgt
17Too Much Government Intervention
- A general problem with government subsidies is
that people tend to become dependent on them.
This has often been the case with welfare
programs, Medicaid (to an extent), and other
forms of governmental aid. As a developed nation,
we must be able to provide for people until they
are able to provide for themselves. How can the
government provide internet access in a manner
that encourages these poorer communities to
continue utilizing it without governmental
intervention?
18The Digital Divide is Closing
- Sufficient evidence exists that the digital
divide is decreasing. - By 2000 public schools in the US had roughly 1
computer for every 4 students. - Almost all schools are connected to the internet
as were about ¾ of classrooms. - Computers are becoming cheaper which makes them
accessible to more people. - As technology becomes more prevalent in society,
it becomes more accessible in public spaces so
even though a person may not be able to afford a
computer in their own home, they can access
computers in public spaces such as internet
cafés, schools, and public libraries. - Warschauer, Mark. "Demystifying the Digital
Divide." Scientific America Aug. 2003, Vol. 289
Issue 2, p42, 6p, 2c. http//web.ebscohost.com/eho
st/ delivery?vid3hkd14sid
19THE END