Coronavirus lockdowns mean poor people without Internet access are being harry potter cover iphone further marginalised, researchers and rights groups said on Tuesday, urging governments and telecommunications companies to do more to get them online.
From schooling to looking for jobs and applying for state aid, coronavirus lockdown phone cover for iphone 3 measures have shifted many key activities online while also making it harder for people on low incomes smart cover iphone 5c to get connected, according to cover iphone 7 homer French tech consultancy Capgemini.
“The Internet has cover samsung galaxyj3 2017 become a basic need. It’s no longer a ‘nice to have’,” Capgemini chief operating officer, Aiman Ezzat, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
“The lack of it prevents people from having access to public services, to education, to a chance in life. It just limits what you can do.”
Nearly one in cover samsung s6 edge originale two people cover samsung j7 2016 horror worldwide do not use the Internet, according to the United Nations’ Internet and telecoms agency (ITU).
Even before COVID 19, campaigners say they faced bleaker life prospects due to social isolation and reduced employment and education opportunities.
Since lockdowns began, libraries and Internet cafes that many use to get online have closed, said Helen Milner, who heads the Good Things Foundation, a British charity working on digital inclusion.
Others who have a smartphone but struggled to pay for cover iphone 6 batman data can no longer access free hotspots, she said.
“They have to prioritise other things like food and rent,” Milner told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.
A Capgemini survey of more than 1,300 people with no internet access in six countries France, Germany, India, Sweden, Britain, cover samsung galaxy s4 and the United States found 69 percent cover iphone 6 silicone personalizzate were living in cover iphone x consigli poverty.
More than 40 percent of the people who were offline were aged between 18 and 36, the survey found.
The poll was conducted between December and February, before most coronavirus custodia cover samsung note 10 lockdowns began, and Ezzat said the pandemic had exacerbated existing problems.
Some 1.6 billion workers, representing nearly half of the global labour force, are in immediate danger of losing their livelihoods due to the pandemic, the International cover h&m iphone 7 Labour Organisation said.
Milner said that in Britain and elsewhere people with custodia cover iphone 11 pro no custodia cover huawei p8 lite access to the Internet were often unable to get information about the virus, talk to relatives, interview for jobs or asylum applications and access welfare programmes and banking services.
From Tunisia to the United States, phone companies in many countries have sought to address cover samsung j6 personalizzata the issue with steps cover iphone 1 euro such as cutting prices, increasing broadband coverage and removing data caps, digital rights group Access Now said in a report last week.
But it said telecoms firms should do more, calling for them to lift all data allowances and waive overage and late payment fees. The report also urged governments to broaden connectivity and lift internet shutdowns in custodia cover samsung s7 some restive regions such as those imposed by Myanmar and India.
“All around the world, decision makers in government and the private sector have the obligation to step up and fix this cover samsung s7 gold problem,” Access Now’s global net neutrality lead Eric Null cover iphone 5 bumper trasparente said in a statement…