The Internet of the fields and the Internet of the cities
It is clear that white areas are not limited to rural deserts. They also concern tourist areas that are very popular in the summer with cyclists, hikers and coastal travellers.
In the Luberon, if optical fibre has arrived in Isle sur la Sorgue or Maubec, ADSL is particularly anaemic in Gordes, and 4G is almost absent. The various local players are suffering from the disinvestment of the main operators and the public authorities. The latter are struggling to impose a minimum service for services that are now essential at a time when administrative procedures are being dematerialised.
If digital technology is on everyone's lips today, once you leave the urban areas, you are in digital poverty with a two-speed France.
In a report published on 16 January 2020, the former rights defender Jacques Toubon stated that "in municipalities with fewer than 1,000 inhabitants, more than a third of the inhabitants do not have access to quality Internet, which represents nearly 75% of municipalities in France and 15% of the population". Fortunately, alternative Internet service providers and digital development companies are helping rural communities. They are setting up small-scale radio networks accessible to individuals and small businesses. These are essential local initiatives, as the France Très Haut Débit plan, launched in 2013, and the New Deal Mobile, launched in 2018, are struggling to eradicate the digital divide and ensure equal access to the Internet for all French people.
Source : Le Monde Informatique
- Tags: 4G, abonnés fibre, accès internet, accès internet France, accès THD, accès très haut débit, ADSL, FAI, fournisseurs d'Accès à Internet, fracture numérique, internet, le monde informatique, mobile, New Deal Mobile, Numérique, Numérique en France, opérateurs, opérateurs Télécom, plan THD, plan THD France, réseau, Très Haut Débit, zones blanches