U.K. officials believe the volume of digital content used by consumers will increase 10 times to 100 times over the next three to five years.
So officials at the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills and the Department for Culture, Media and Sport have proposed an interim goal of 2 Mbps connections to all U.K. residences by 2012, and also propose a new tax of 50 pence per month on all fixed copper lines to fund the next generation of access networks.
The "Digital Britain" report suggests the funds raised by the tax will be available to fund construction to the one third of U.K. homes that are unlikely to get next-generation access because costs are too high.
"We are at a tipping point in relation to the online world," the report says. "It is moving from conferring advantage on those who are in it to conferring active disadvantage on those who are without."
The report also notes that the broadband "problem" has a few sources, not just "access." Though availability is an issue, affordability, ability to use the Internet and PCs, as well as the perceived relevance of broadband all are issues.
Building facilities addresses one of the problems. The others are more difficult, ranging from disinterest to the price of service. Ofcom, the U.K. communications regulator, points out in a recent survey of its own that 42 percent of U.K. residents say they would not use broadband even if the service were provided free, and they also got a free PC to use.
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