Monday, August 19, 2019
Internet Access: Flat Fee Vs. Pay-per-use :: essays research papers
 Internet Access: Flat Fee vs. Pay-Per-Use           Most Internet users are either not charged to access information, or pay  a low-cost flat fee. The Information SuperHighway, on the other hand, will  likely be based upon a pay-per-use model. On a gross level, one might say that  the payment model for the Internet is closer to that of broadcast (or perhaps  cable) television while the model for the Information SuperHighway is likely to  be more like that of pay-per-view T.V.         "Pay-per-use" environments affect user access habits. "Flat fee"  situations encourage exploration. Users in flat-fee environments navigate  through webs of information and tend to make serendipitous discoveries. "Pay-  per-use" situations give the public the incentive to focus their attention on  what they know they already want, or to look for well-known items previously  recommended by others. In "pay-per-use" environments, people tend to follow more  traditional paths of discovery, and seldom explore totally unexpected avenues.  "Pay-per-use" environments discourage browsing. Imagine how a person's reading  habits would change if they had to pay for each article they looked at in a  magazine or newspaper.         Yet many of the most interesting things we learn about or find come from  following unknown routes, bumping into things we weren't looking for. (Indeed,  Thomas Kuhn makes the claim that, even in the hard sciences, real breakthroughs  and interesting discoveries only come from following these unconventional routes  [Kuhn, Thomas, The Structure of Scientific Revolutions, Chicago: University of  Chicago Press, 1962]).         And people who have to pay each time they use a piece of information are  likely to increasingly rely upon specialists and experts. For example, in a  situation where the reader will have to pay to read each paragraph of background  on Bosnia, s/he is more likely to rely upon State Department summaries instead  of paying to become more generally informed him/herself. And in the 1970s and  1980s the library world learned that the introduction of expensive pay-per-use  databases discouraged individual exploration and introduced the need for  intermediaries who specialized in searching techniques.    Producers vs. Consumers         On the Internet anyone can be an information provider or an information  consumer. On the Information SuperHighway most people will be relegated to the  role of information consumer.         Because services like "movies-on-demand" will drive the technological  development of the Information SuperHighway, movies' need for high bandwidth  into the home and only narrow bandwidth coming back out will likely dominate.  (see Besser, Howard. "Movies on Demand May Significantly Change the Internet",  Bulletin of the American Association for Information Science, October 1994)  Metaphorically, this will be like a ten-lane highway coming into the home and  only a tiny path leading back out (just wide enough to take a credit card number    					    
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