Criteria for the measurement of the impact of the internet in society: Difference between revisions

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=='''Measurement of physical and functional access to digital infrastructure'''==
=='''Measurement of physical and functional access to digital infrastructure'''==


''Speed
''Speed
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User-submitted information
User-submitted information


''Infrastructure location, size and routing
''Infrastructure location, size and routing
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Arbor Networks
Arbor Networks


=='''Qualitative and quantitative assessments of content control'''==
=='''Qualitative and quantitative assessments of content control'''==

Revision as of 14:52, 2 June 2014

Measurement of physical and functional access to digital networks

Measurement of physical and functional access to digital infrastructure

Speed

Advertised speeds (OECD, FCC)

Content delivery networks and web services

Download Speeds

Distributed client-side hardware: download and upload speed

Crowdsourcing


Price

Comparison of offers from all ISPs and countries

User-submitted information


Infrastructure location, size and routing

IP distribution

Domain allocation

Internet hosts

Number, size and relationships of autonomous systems (AS)

Network bandwidth estimates

Internet exchange location of traffic

Route identification and analysis

National network status

International pipe location, traffic and dependencies


Suggested Sources:

Akamai

Netfilx

Government partnerships

Samknows

Ookla

M-Lab

Ne-Index

Speedtest

Renesys

Arbor Networks

Qualitative and quantitative assessments of content control

Measurement of online activity (content and communities)

Tracking internet activity of citizens, companies and public agencies in relation to human development and well-being

Number of people engaging

Types and quantity of information production, assessement and sharing

Formation of civic organizations, professional groups and new media entities

Growth and scale of e-commerce and online business

Use of online resources for health, education and science

Impact on governance

Privation comparison to offline activities

Challenges

Overproduction of data

Online activity attributes (technology affordance vs migration and mirroring of political, economic and social transactions)

Possible approaches

Consistent measures

Per case comparison of findings to non consistent measures

Measuring the incremental activity shift

Questions

To what extend does access to the internet contribute to a better informed populace tha can effectively participate in public life and contribute to human development?

Do citizens have access to information that is accurate?

Do they know how to identify misinformation?

Does increasing engagement with digital media lead to better policy decisions?

Theodor Kolovos

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