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WSWS : News
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Internet & Computerization
World Internet usage grows to 300 million
By Mike Ingram
15 September 2000
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Almost three hundred million people access the Internet worldwide
according to a report released this month by the Internet monitoring
service Nielsen/NetRatings.
In the first ever examination of Internet access and penetration
in Europe, Asia Pacific and North America, the report found that
more than 295 million people in 20 countries in those regions
have access to the Internet from a home computer.
While the US still has by far the widest Internet usage, with
137 million people having home access, the report notes a significant
growth in Japan and Europe. Some 26.3 million people access the
Internet from Japan and 82 million in Europe. Southeast Asia,
including Australia and New Zealand, has 37 million people online.
Europe's leading countries in terms of the number of people
accessing the Internet are the UK with 19.5 million; Germany,
15.5; and Italy, 11.1 million. Not surprisingly, given the dominance
of the English language on the World Wide Web, the UK ranks third
after the US and Japan. Nevertheless, 27 percent usage rate is
highly significant given the relatively high costs of access in
a country that has yet to implement un-metered local call charges.
Of the 82 million people across Europe, equating to one in
five households with Internet access, more than half56 percentreside
in the UK, Germany and Italy.
Though ranking behind the US, Japan, UK, Germany, Canada and
Italy, Australia is recorded as having 7.6 million Internet users
out of a population of around 18 million people. According to
CommerceNet, Finland has the highest Internet penetration rate
at 43 percent. Some 2.5 million out of a total 5 million people
are online in the country.
As well as providing the details of how many people are accessing
the Net, the report gives a more detailed breakdown of user habits
online. Provided on a commercial subscription basis for advertisers,
Nielson/NetRatings focuses on product searching and online purchases,
but says little about users' reading habits.
The report points to a significant growth in Net usage in the
UK, recording the highest browse-to-purchase ratio of all the
European countries, with 64 percent of UK Internet users who have
browsed for product information in the last six months also making
online purchases in the same time period.
Interestingly the report notes that access from the workplace
tends to be lower than home access in most countries. David Day,
director of analytics at ACNeilson eRatings.com, said in a Nielsen/Netratings
press release, This is particularly the case in the Netherlands,
where the home access rate is almost twice that of work.
48 percent of users access the Internet from home in the Netherlands,
as against 26 percent at work. For the UK the figures are 42 percent
and 24 percent respectively.
In Finland the figures are much closer, with home usage at
43 percent and access from work at 37 percent. This is accounted
for by the much lower proportion of households with a fixed telephone
line. Fixed lines have decreased over recent years as more and
more people have switched to mobile telephones. While this has
held back home usage in the first wave of the Internet as a mass
medium, Finland looks well placed for the so-called Third Generation
or mobile Internet.
An earlier report by the same company said that home Internet
access had reached a critical mass in the US, with 52 percent
of the home population having Internet access and 32 percent of
the home population surfing the World Wide Web in July. According
to that report, nearly 144 million people have access to the Internet
in the US, compared with 106.3 million a year ago. This represents
a growth rate of 35 percent over the past year.
According to Sean Kaldor, vice president of e-commerce at NetRatings,
Lower prices for personal computers and competitive rates
for high-speed Internet access have increased the demand for Internet
use. Internet access is growing dramatically each day due to cheaper
access, making it possible for the mainstream consumer to log
on.
Disturbingly, Kalder notes, While Web usage has increased,
the number of sites people visit has dropped in the past year.
This means that the barrier to entry is higher for new Internet
ventures as companies vie for surfers' attention. Kalder
puts this down to the power of branding online, as companies
like Amazon.com have effectively leveraged their brand to amass
a captive and loyal audience.
No doubt corporate branding is as important in relation to
the Internet as in all other walks of life, but the fact that
Internet users are visiting fewer sites may also be due to the
increasing commercialisation of the Internet itself.
New so-called broadband providers, offering high-speed access
to the Net, also provide their own entry points or portals. Unbeknownst
to the inexperienced user, when a search is made through a provider's
web site for a particular phrase or keyword, the results presented
are not an arbitrary selection from across the Internet. Invariably,
they are selected from a list of sites that have a commercial
arrangement with the provider.
Not only e-commerce sites, but increasingly the major news
corporations are striking up deals with providers and search portals
such as Yahoo and Altavista to ensure that their stories are ranked
higher than rivals in search results.
The continued growth and geographic spread of the Internet
is obviously important, and the figures relating to e-commerce
are themselves interesting. But the value of the Internet for
society as a whole, and the mass of ordinary working people in
particular, lies not in its use as a giant cyber shopping mall
but as a mass information highway where the free exchange of information
and ideas can flourish.
See Also:
AOL buyout of Time Warner:
merger frenzy sweeping corporate America
[14 January 2000]
Growing concern over Internet
privacy
[25 February 2000]
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