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Study Gives High Marks to U.S. Internet - New York Times


From: David Farber <dave () farber net>
Date: Wed, 9 Apr 2008 01:24:19 -0700

http://www.nytimes.com/2008/04/09/technology/09internet.html

By JOHN MARKOFF

Published: April 9, 2008

SAN FRANCISCO — Contradicting earlier studies, conventional wisdom and politicians’ rhetoric, European researchers say 
that the Internet infrastructure of the United States is one of the world’s best and getting better.


The Global Information Technology Report issued on Wednesday found that the United States now ranked fourth in the 
world behind just three European nations: Denmark, Sweden and Switzerland. Last year the United States was ranked 
seventh.

The study, which has been issued annually for the last seven years, is an effort to draw a more complete picture of 
national network readiness.

The study was done by Insead, the business school near Paris, on behalf of the World Economic Forum, a policy and 
conference group based in Switzerland. It used an index generated from 68 variables including market factors, political 
and regulatory environment and technology infrastructure rather than just bandwidth capacity and data transmission 
speeds.

Some Internet industry veterans were skeptical of the positive claims about the United States compared with the rest of 
the world. “My gut feeling is that we don’t have the type of deployment you have abroad,” said David J. Farber, an 
Internet pioneer and a professor of computer science at Carnegie Mellon University. “If you are looking at broadband, 
we have a lot of problems. We are slow as molasses in deploying the next generation.”

The Insead assessment offers a stark contrast to other appraisals based on single measures that have portrayed the 
United States, the nation that invented the global data network, as both lagging and declining in the broadband boom. 
Last year a range of statistics on global bandwidth use indicated that the United States was trailing other industrial 
nations in both broadband network consumption and penetration as a percentage of population.

<snip>

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