Americans would give up TV before Internet: survey

A man holds a tablet and a smartphone. PHOTO | FILE

What you need to know:

  • Even when counting those who don't go online, Pew said 46 per cent of all adults would find it hard to give up the Internet
  • Pew noted the spectacular growth in use of the Web, especially since 1995

WASHINGTON

Americans have become so enamoured of the Internet, they would more readily forgo television than online access, a survey showed Thursday.

The Pew Research Centre survey released ahead of the 25th anniversary of the World Wide Web found 53 per cent of US Internet users would find it "very hard" to give up Web access, up from 38 per cent in 2006.

Even when counting those who don't go online, Pew said 46 per cent of all adults would find it hard to give up the Internet.

By contrast, Pew's survey showed 35 per cent of all US adults television would be very hard to give up, compared with 44 per cent in 2006.

Women were more likely than men to be attached to the Internet, as were people with higher levels of income and education, Pew said in the report issued ahead of the March 12 anniversary.

CELL PHONE SECOND ON LIST

The cell phone comes in a close second to the Internet: 49 per cent of mobile phone owners said it would be difficult to give up their handset, up from 43 per cent in 2006. That amounts to 44 per cent of all adults who say now that their cell phone would be very hard to live without.
Meanwhile landline telephones are losing favour.

Just 28 per cent of landline telephone owners said it would be a hardship to live without this, a big drop from 48 per cent in 2006. Because many people have already dropped their landlines, the finding means that just 17 per cent of all adults would find their landline very hard to give up.

Pew noted the spectacular growth in use of the Web, especially since 1995. Some 87 per cent of American adults use the Internet, either from a PC or mobile device, up from 14 per cent in 1995.

Pew also found that Americans are using the Web more often: 71 per cent go online on a typical day, compared with 29 per cent in 2000.

In 1995, 42 per cent of US adults had never heard of the Internet and another 21 per cent had only a vague notion of what it was.

The rise of mobile device use represents the biggest shift in access in recent years: 68 per cent of US adults now access the Internet on a cell phone, tablet, or other mobile device, at least occasionally, Pew found.

Pew found that 90 per cent of US adults have a cell phone and two-thirds of those use their device to go online. A third of cell phone owners say that their primary online access point is their phone.

Mobile access took a huge leap forward with the introduction of the iPhone in 2007, and some 58 per cent of adults have a smartphone now.

WEB IS 'A GOOD THING'

The report found 90 per cent of Internet users say the World Wide Web has been a good thing for them personally and only six per cent say it has been a bad thing.

Three out of four said it been a good thing for society, while 15 per cent say it has been negative.

"Using the Web - browsing it, searching it, sharing on it - has become the main activity for hundreds of millions of people around the globe," Pew said.

"Its birthday offers an occasion to revisit the ways it has made the internet a part of Americans' social lives."