The government should give consumers who are excluded from first-generation
broadband the opportunity to jump straight to next-generation internet access,
according to the
Ofcom
Consumer Panel.
Mapping rural areas of the country still unable to get broadband, and
engaging the private sector in finding ways to improve access, is crucial, said
the group.
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"If we are imaginative and use a mix of private and public business models,
we could provide a way for consumers who are excluded from first-generation
broadband to leapfrog straight to the next generation," said panel chairman Anna
Bradley.
Investment in broadband for those currently on the wrong side of the digital
divide will benefit society and the economy in the long run, according to the
panel.
The group pointed to services such as
NHS
telemedicine and education for marginalised communities.
Bradley believes that the private sector alone will not address these
problems.
"We already know that the economic case for next-generation access will not
stack up in some areas, and we can predict which areas that will be," she said.
"So let's address these issues alongside commercial roll-out, not after it."
The Ofcom Consumer Panel is an independent advisory body set up to advise
communications watchdog Ofcom.
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