Category Archives: digital divide

Monopolies and Freedom

This is a bit of a rant.  I am surprised that so few have stood up to the recent monopolies that have been created.  Moreover, the restrictions that come from these companies are horrible.  Much of this thought stems from a recent post over at Googlization of Everything by Siva Vaidhyanathan.  The post was from Tim Wu and originally ran over at Boing Boing.

The alarming issues that I see are the following:

Even though you purchase a mobile device, you are restricted to what carrier you use.  For example, my iPad must use AT&T while my Droid must use Verizon as carriers.  Could you imagine if Honda owners were forced to use Shell, or Gap shoppers were forced to purchase coffee only at Starbucks.  We would never accept that, yet we accept it in terms of mobile access.  Tim Wu argues that this violates ownership rights and the right to freedom of speech.

Net neutrality is another issue.  Carriers, we have really shrunk from a ton to a few ISPs (Aol, Juno, etc… are gone) leaving Comcast and AT&T as the two major ISPs.  On the wireless side we have a few more, but really it’s just Verizon and AT&T based on usage.  The problem with the lack of competition is the ISPs can get away with attempts to censor or restrict freedom.  For example, they have both attempted to block all access to SKYPE or YouTube.  They argue that these sites suck up too much bandwidth.  If you can’t use the internet to communicate with loved ones, or to view some video’s, what the heck good is it?  Net neutrality is of fundamental importance to librarians, who strive for free and open access.

Why do we continue to accept these two attempts at restriction?

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Filed under digital divide, mobile devices, net neutrality

FCC’s Digital Literacy Corps

There is a great post over at Libraries and Transliteracy discussing the recent proposal for the FCC’s Digital Literacy Corps.

The proposal calls for:

The plan also calls for every American community to have at least one “anchor” institution, such as a school, library or hospital, that has ultra-high-speed Internet access. The FCC defines that as at least a gigabit per second, 10 times faster than the 100 megabits per second envisioned for home connections.

How awesome is that?  What will the implications for libraries be?  Funding?  Training?

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My newest toy

I cannot resist the urge to detail the adventures of me and my new phone.  I recently purchased a Motorola Droid, and I cannot stop raving about it.  This phone is great.  How does it related to the purpose of this site and information activism, you may ask, well as I hold the phone in my hands I realize that one day (not too far off) the entire content of my library can fit into this tiny (beautiful, sexy, and sleek) device.

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Filed under digital divide, information activist