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Broadband an election issue?
Posted by: eusty on Friday, January 30, 2004 - 02:40 AM
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The Conservative shadow minister for economic affairs, Michael Fabricant MP, slammed the government at the "Revolution at the Edge:
Broadband Networks and Innovation" conference.
Speaking to the conference yesterday, he claims that Ofcom and the government have stunted broadband growth by allowing connections as low as 128Kbps to be classed as broadband. This he says confuses those who are not broadband literate, and the general public at large, into thinking that the 128Kbps connections are what broadband is all about. This in turn will lead to customer dissatisfaction and slow broadband takeup in the UK.
| "Oftel and the government have qualified its take-up
figures by stating they are for download speeds of between 128Kbps and two
Megabits per second (Mbps). You and I know that 128Kbps is not broadband as we would understand it."
"In actual fact, the definition of what constitutes broadband is open to some dispute, with many considering the definition of broadband to be
services over 500Kbps,"
"I believe this failure to pin down the speeds constituting broadband might go some way to explaining Oftel's latest research, which says that one in 10 broadband customers are unhappy with
their service, saying that it is slower than they anticipated," |
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Michael Fabricant shadow minister for economic
affairs |
It seems as if broadband issues are stating to make it into the political arena, and this may well signal that broadband could become an issue in the next general election.
This has already started in a local campaign in North Lincolnshire, the Tory candidate for Brigg and Goole, Matthew Bean, has recently launched his election campaign and one of his key targets is broadband for the local area.
| "More and more people are now using the internet and are finding it can make a difference to their lives, making it easier
to contact friends, buy goods, run a business, or find information.
"Broadband would be of huge benefit to this area, by allowing people to use the internet 10 times faster than at present.
"It would help a range of people from local businesses to students."
"I will be encouraging as many people as possible to sign up for broadband," |
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Matthew Bean Conservative candidate for Brigg and
Goole |
We await Labour's response!!
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