Support
strong for open Internet in developing world
Filipino youths in an Internet cafe in Manila. Support is
strong across emerging and developing countries for an Internet without
government censorship, a US
survey showed on Wednesday. (AFP/Jay Directo)
WASHINGTON: Support is strong across emerging and developing
countries for an Internet without government censorship, a US survey showed on Wednesday.
The Pew
Research Center
found a majority opposed to government restrictions on online activity in 22
of 24 countries surveyed.
Support was especially high among younger people and in
countries with a high percentage of people using the Internet.
Eighty-nine per cent of those surveyed in Venezuela said they supported an unfettered
Internet, as did at least 80 per cent in Lebanon,
Chile, Egypt, Argentina
and Brazil.
The numbers were high in Mexico
(79 per cent), South Africa
(77 per cent), Bolivia (76
per cent), Malaysia and
the Philippines (both at
73 per cent) and Nigeria
(72 per cent).
"Support for Internet freedom tends to be strong
in nations with high rates of Internet penetration, such as Chile and Argentina, where roughly
two-thirds of the population is online," the Pew report said.
"It is less common in nations with lower
penetration rates, like Indonesia
and Uganda,"
where 55 and 49 per cent, respectively, said they oppose government
censorship.
The report comes days after the US government
announced it was giving up its key role in charge of the Internet's technical
operations, handing over those functions to "the global
multi-stakeholder community."
While US officials said they would work to maintain a
free and open Internet, critics of the decision said the move opens the door
to other countries to impose new controls on online activity.
In the Pew survey, Pakistan had the lowest
percentage of people expressing opposition to censorship -- 22 per cent --
but 62 per cent of people polled gave no response or were undecided.
Among younger people in the 18-29 age bracket, a strong
majority supported an open Internet in every country except in Pakistan, Pew
said.
The results from Russia
contrasted with those of the rest of the survey, with a relatively low
percentage of 63 per cent saying they oppose censorship even though Russia has
among the highest levels of Internet use.
The well-educated were more likely to support an open
Internet in many countries. In Tunisia, for example, 73 per cent
of college graduates said it is important to have Internet access without
government censorship, compared with 56 per cent of the overall population.
Pew researchers polled 21,847 people in 24 emerging and
developing economies from March 3, 2013 to May 1 in face-to-face interviews.
The margin of error ranged from 3.5 percentage points
in Venezuela to 7.7 points
in Turkey,
with most of the national surveys between four and five percentage points.
AFP
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