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Is Mobile Broadband a Luxury Or a Human Right?

concealment sends this quote from an article at CNN: "Moderating a discussion on the future of broadband, Mashable editor-in-chief Lance Ulanoff tossed a provocative question to the audience: 'By quick show of hands, how many out there think that broadband is a luxury?' Next question: 'How many out there think it is a human right?' That option easily carried the audience vote. Broadband access is too important to society to be relegated to a small, privileged portion of the world population, Hans Vestberg, president and CEO of Ericsson, said during the discussion. Dr. Hamadoun Touré, secretary-general of the International Telecommunication Union, echoed Vestberg's remarks. 'We need to make sure all the world's inhabitants are connected to the goodies of the online world, which means better health care, better education, more sustainable economic and social development,' Touré said."

9 of 332 comments (clear)

  1. A Luxury by siphonophore · · Score: 5, Insightful

    One must be careful about diluting the word "right." Leave it at 3, and protect them fiercely.

    --
    Dance like you're hurt, Love like you need money, and work when somebody's watching.
    -Scott Adams
    1. Re:A Luxury by bondsbw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When living your life often requires internet access, then it becomes a right.

      Living your life more often requires a car than internet access. Is owning a car a right? Do we all get free cars?

      --
      All my liberal friends think I'm a conservative, all my conservative friends think I'm a liberal.
    2. Re:A Luxury by kelemvor4 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When living your life often requires internet access, then it becomes a right.

      Living your life more often requires a car than internet access. Is owning a car a right? Do we all get free cars?

      Plenty of people live without both, and neither one is a right. This is silliness that's being used to sell electronics.

    3. Re:A Luxury by cayenne8 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      When living your life often requires internet access, then it becomes a right. If everyone had provided the non-internet equivalent of the daily services, then maybe it would be a luxury

      Seriously???

      I mean, the internet is fantastically convenient...but there's nothing I couldn't do to live (eat, buy stuff, pay bills) without having an internet connection, and doing things the "old fashioned" way of like 8-10 years ago....

      A right? Give me a break.....

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
  2. You have the right to pay for your own stuff. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Oh spare us the human "rights" that involve other people paying for the stuff you want.

  3. Right vs Good Idea by BenSchuarmer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It's not a right, but that doesn't mean it's not a good idea. I think societies will find that the benefits of setting it up are worth more than the cost.

  4. Rights versus someone else's property by jedidiah · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Rights are only appropriately applied to liberties. You never have the right to someone else's property or labor. Goods and services are not something you can have a "right" to.

    Access may be a compelling social good but it is absurd to call it a right.

    --
    A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
  5. Life, Liberty, Pursuit of Happiness by Revotron · · Score: 5, Insightful

    1. Life: Can you survive without it? Yes.
    2. Liberty: Does not having it limit your freedom of speech, right to bear arms, right to a fair and speedy trial, or other consitutional rights? No.
    3. Pursuit of Happiness: Could you live a happy life without it? Yes.

    It is not a right to be bestowed upon you, it is an opportunity afforded to you by others. As such, others may request compensation for it.

    I'm getting sick of this new generation of entitlement.

  6. A Luxury? by jiriw · · Score: 5, Informative

    None of those things are necessities for life. To survive, to be alive, I do not need to use on-line vendors.

    Here in the Netherlands we increasingly need to... Various government taxes already can only, be handled online. Currently the taxes that can only be handled online are those for all (small and large) businesses. And if those businesses refuse they are put out of business. Individuals can still get a paper form for their income tax but it's already strongly discouraged. More and more parts of the government are going an online-mostly or only route, not only for additional stuff but the essentials.

    Many businesses stopped sending bills through 'snail' mail. Most communication businesses (telephone, cable and internet providers) were the first to do so. Banks are decreasing their number of offices throughout the country rapidly. Most of the time only the major cities still have one (1) office where you can do your banking business. (Such an office would have to serve ten of thousands of customers if not a majority was doing his/ber banking online.) For the rest they only offer online services. The least expensive health-insurers (with the basic package) only offer you service if they can send bills electronically and medicine can only be ordered through an internet-apothecary (after you get a prescription by a certified GP or specialist of course).

    With other things, not interacting online causes a hefty financial penalty. Getting your receipts through mail is a value-added option, not included in the basic packages for those businesses still offering it that don't have to send you the actual goods by mail (like shops... which are cheaper most of the time, by the way, if you order the goods online). The best deals on contracts for electricity, cooking gas, all insurances, savings accounts, mortgages and other financial products, communication products, etc. are found online.
    If you want to access the educational system, you have to be online, if only it was to sign up for an actual school or university (for college education or equivalents or better).

    A person in the Netherlands which doesn't have access to the internet has either a very poor standard of living or a very high one (because he can afford to opt-out).

    I would say, here in the Netherlands the ability to have an internet connection capable of doing all this described above is a right. Of course that does not imply you should get a connection for free. You should still pay a proper (but also limited) fee for your connection if you decide to use the services of a provider that provides you with said internet connection. The providers however are (and increasingly so) regulated, for example, by means of laws for things like net-neutrality and the anti-telecoms-monopoly agency OPTA. And there are also government subsidies for providers willing to implement connections to places less profitable. Which is all fair, considering you can't really live in the Netherlands without having an internet connection of some sorts.