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Professor Charles Crothers
New Zealand Internet Rights Survey
Development of a NZ Internet Freedom Index Project
• The survey is a component of the Index project (Joy Liddicoat et al.)
• Funder: Internet NZ
Methodology• Only those aspects of potential internet rights which seemed readily
understandable by the general public. • Constrained to internet users - presumably few non-internet users will
have developed enough knowledge/experience of the internet to formulate views about internet rights.
• Sampling source: internet panel. • 755 People 20-64 years of age on a Buzz panel, April 2013. • Similar in characteristics to the overall NZ population. • Particularly skewed towards those of higher education qualifications and
there is a moderate over-representation of respondents from major cities and a corresponding under-representation of those from rural areas.
• The average length of time spent on the survey was 8 minutes. • Views of under 20 year olds was too difficult given their poor response-
availability and that people 65 and over might have insufficient experience with the internet to be able to provide knowledgeable answers.
Conceptual framework
Key (potential) internet rights were:• Access to the internet• Abilities to use the internet• Rights to express opinions• Rights not to be subject to unfortunate things
happening to people on-line.• Rights to free access to information (not
covered).• Facilitation of Social/Political Change
Socio-demographic characteristics
• Information collected on Age-group, gender, settlement size and education and extent of weekly internet usage.
• Quotas were set in relation to age-group and gender. • It was found that while age and gender had shaped
differences the other characteristics did not seem to shape views.
Hierarchy of Rights
• General statement re Rights - 89% agreeing. • Extension of rights to the internet context – 73%.• Support for a right of access to the internet – 59%.
How support Access & For Whom
• Through a government subsidy of Internet equipment and connection costs – 41%
• Through free access at libraries -94%.• Supporting internet access of ...the elderly (64%), • ...People in low income households (61%) and • ...especially people in rural areas (69%). • About a quarter came up with other groups: especially disabled,
elderly, youth • A solid minority (about a sixth of respondents) who reject any
attempt to operationalise such a right (denying that there should be such a right and suggesting that – just as ones phone or other access – you are required to pay for it).
• Right to access include some training so that people can use the Internet effectively -55%).
Freedom of Expression
• Should not be curbed for any reason -33%; • People should not be allowed to defame other people on
the Internet, even if this means their right to freedom of expression is curbed -68.2%
• On balance people’s right to privacy on the Internet is more important than other people’s right to freedom of expression - 64.5%
• A third didn’t answer this write-in question re circumstances justifying curbing.
• The nearly two-thirds answering mentioned bullying, breach of privacy etc.
Complaints Authority
• There should be a which can order changes e.g. content removed if there is a considerable breach of someone’s privacy -86%.
• Half thought best type of Complaints authority would be a government agency, whereas a third supported an industry agency.
Summary
• Views on Access are not same as views on Freedoms
• Types of view re Access:- internet-deniers (often quite angry about it) who see the internet as nothing more than an extension of their phone and to be paid for in full- internet-acceptors who see the internet as giving access to a (partial) new world and where everyone (or many) needs to be lifted over any thresholds to take full advantage of this.- and of course intermediate groupings
Summary contd.
• Views on ‘Freedom’ are less polarised but also divided into some:
- Who see no need for any controls at all
- Who see existing protections adequately cover internet situations
- Who see extra difficulties arising with internet.
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