By Gemma Simpson, 19 March 2007 11:35
NEWS
The digital divide in Blighty could be set to deepen further as offline individuals are left behind their more tech-savvy neighbours.
John Fisher, chief executive of the digital inclusion charity Citizens Online told silicon.com: "One-third - 16 million - of individuals in the UK have not been online and they don't understand how to do it."
Fisher added there's a danger the digital divide will deepen as there are large numbers of people still struggling with technology that must not be left behind as everyone else gets more tech-savvy.
Technology trends for the US are generally two years ahead of the UK, making it a good indicator of what will happen here, according to Ellen Helsper, a survey research fellow at the Oxford Internet Institute who was speaking at a BT-sponsored round-table event.
Want more photos?
Click here to browse the full archive of our photo stories.
In the US the number of web users has reached a plateau at a much lower level than expected - with one-third of the US population still to go online, she said.
This implies a substantial number of people in the UK are not going to embrace the internet either, Helsper added.
And even some of those who have got themselves online are still nervous about it. Nearly a quarter of people are worried information on their computer could fall into the wrong hands, according to a survey by BT.
But it's not all doom and gloom - many of those with computers seem to be embracing technology.
More than three-quarters (76 per cent) of families said they love the impact of technology on their lives and more than half of parents (57 per cent) surveyed believe the internet has helped their children's school grades, according to BT's research, which interviewed 1,021 parents across the UK.

Comments
There are 4 comments. Join the discussion
1. Mike Bunyan
Is the industry looking for 100% take up? Do they understand the economics of saturation market?
What constitutes 'being online'? If a person uses a computer at work, is this 'online'? or does it refer to commiting purchasing transactions 'online'? and does it matter if it is in business or personal capacity?
As usual the phrasing of your questions and statements is just like justifying upgrade to vista, vague.
2. Barry Sumner
It begs the question, why is it assumed everybody wishes to be on-line? The Freeview rollout should have had an integral active return path over PSTN/ADSL with a combined Internet browser as part of the platform proposition. The Government could have crowed that they had potentially put the UK population on email & Web without it costing them a penny – surely a major spin opportunity missed! This would have passively delivered an on-line capability into most homes in the UK, with a disproportionate benefit to the very people that are reportedly missing out.
3. GK
My thoughts on this is....
...is this actually not a pretty good result?!? If one third have not been online, then two thirds have been online and that is surely a great figure!
Personally, I would be very surprised if any country has a greater figure for this.
4. anonymous
Lies, damn lies and ...?
Of the 100% population, what proportion will be too young or too old to "go on-line"? Of more interest is the percentage of households on-line.