Here Comes Not Quite Everybody
It is a cliché that the Internet connects everyone, so it probably has escaped consciousness that many actually cannot afford the high-speed service the rest of us now take for granted. They are being bypassed.
Susan Crawford, a professor at New York's Cardozo law school, recently called attention to our "digital divide." "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."
The U.S. Department of Commerce pointed out, for example, "a mere 4 out of every 10 households with annual household incomes below $25,000 in 2010 reported having wired Internet access at home." Moreover, "only slightly more than half of all African-American and Hispanic households (55 percent and 57 percent, respectively)" have it, compared with 72 percent of whites. (See The New York Times, "The New Digital Divide.")
It's not just a question of convenient, quick shopping or entertainment - though it is also about that. Increasingly medical services, employment information and job interviews, education, and access to vital career information depend on high speed Internet connectivity. In the future more and more essential services will depend on it.




