Four in five believe Web access a fundamental right

LONDON (Reuters) – Four in five adults believe  access to the Internet is a fundamental right — with those  feelings particularly strong in South Korea and China — and  half believe it should never be regulated, according to a global  survey.

A poll of 27,000 adults in 26 countries for the BBC World  Service showed 78 per cent of Internet users believed the Web  gave them greater freedom, while nine in 10 said it was a good  place to learn.

Respondents in the United States were above the average in  believing the Internet was a source for greater freedom and they  were also more confident than most in expressing their opinions  online.

However, others felt concern about spending time online,  with 65 per cent of respondents in Japan saying they did not feel  they could express their opinions safely online, a sentiment  that was also felt in South Korea, France, Germany and China.

The issue of Internet freedoms hit the headlines earlier  this year after the world’s largest search engine Google Inc  threatened to quit China, the world’s biggest Internet market,  over strict censorship rules.

Of the 27,000 surveyed, more than half agreed that the  “Internet should never be regulated by any level of government  anywhere.“

That belief was particularly strong in South Korea, Nigeria  and Mexico while residents in Pakistan, Turkey and China were  the least likely to agree, with only 12 per cent, 13 per cent and  16 per cent respectively strongly agreeing.

Google launched its China search site in 2006, and complies  with local laws requiring censorship of certain content such as  pornography and sensitive subjects such as the banned Fulun Gong  spiritual movement and Tibetan independence.
Other international groups such as Microsoft and local  players including China’s search leader Baidu must also comply  with those laws.

“Despite worries about privacy and fraud, people around the  world see access to the Internet as their fundamental right,”  said Doug Miller, the chairman of GlobeScan which conducted the  survey. “They think the Web is a force for good, and most don’t  want governments to regulate it.”

Over 70 per cent of respondents in Japan, Mexico and Russia  said they could not live without the Internet.

Almost 50 per cent of those who used the Internet said they  most valued the ability to find information. Over 30 per cent valued the ability to interact and communicate with others while 12 per cent saw it as a source for entertainment.

Of the areas of concern, the poll found that fraud was the  greatest worry, ahead of violent and explicit content and  threats to privacy.