Re: Should we oppose the Data Superhighway/NII?
jdblair@nextsrv.cas.muohio.edu says:
I'm not sure what you mean by "various groups," but I do think that a very basic net connection, with minimal services (access to government records, public domain postings, and similar information) should be provided either free or at a very minimal cost.
In New York City, the effective variable cost of an internet mail/news connection is $27 a month -- less than you can panhandle in about threen hours during rush hour, and I'm assuming you never use the phone for anything else and call a couple times a day. The cost is still dropping, and will doubtless be nearly invisible even without any government intervention within a few years. My poorest unemployed friend living in Hell's Kitchen in a fifth floor walkup apartment in roach-infested tenement (no joke) has an internet connection via Panix. I therefore see no reason for government guarantees of net access -- it is obvious that anyone with even minimal initiative can get one already, or will be able to within a few years. The cost of a net connection is far less than the cost of, say, smoking, and there are homeless people who still manage to smoke. Perry
"Perry E. Metzger" says:
In New York City, the effective variable cost of an internet mail/news connection is $27 a month -- less than you can panhandle in about threen hours during rush hour,
Thats "three hours". My assumption is based on the panhandling rates I've seen from homeless people on the subways. Perry
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Perry E. Metzger