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For Immediate Release
July 3, 1996
POLITICKING GOES ELECTRONIC: WEB OFFERS FERTILE
GROUND FOR CANDIDATES' MESSAGES, RESEARCH SUGGESTS
The World Wide Web offers political candidates an effective way to reach
groups of active voters, new research suggests. More than nine out of
10 Web users responding to a recent on- line questionnaire reported they
were
registered to vote, while 63 percent said they had participated in
the most recent local, legislative or national elections.
Those proportions are higher than for the population at large, reflecting
the unique demographics of Web users.
More than two-thirds
of World Wide Web users responding to a recent on-line survey said
they had voted in a recent local, legislative or national election.
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"These
numbers suggest that the Web can potentially play a significant role
in politics," said Georgia Institute of Technology researcher Jim Pitkow.
"The Web appears to be a viable way to distribute political information
because there really are large numbers of registered voters regularly
using the Web."
Questioned about their
political leanings, more than 30 percent of the respondents described
themselves as "moderate," while 35 percent were "liberal" or "very liberal,"
and 21 percent "conservative" or "very conservative." Independent of the
labels, slightly more than 25 percent
identified themselves as Democrats, while 21 percent called themselves
Republicans.
Females were more likely than males to report being "liberal" or "very
liberal." Web users over the age of 50 were nearly twice as likely (82
percent) than the youngest users (46 percent) to participate in elections.
Respondents did not confine their
political activism to voting: 31 percent reported writing elected
officials, 23 percent discussed political issues, and 22 percent signed
petitions. Over 40 percent said they had become more
politically involved since joining the on-line population.
The questions were part of GVU's Fifth World Wide Web User Survey."
Conducted by Pitkow, Colleen Kehoe and other researchers at Georgia Tech's
Graphics, Visualization and Usability
Center, the survey also sampled the views of Web users on such issues
as data privacy, fees charged for Web information, on-line shopping, the
problems of Web surfing -- and who pays the bill.
Some 11,700 Web users responded to the questions posted on the Web between
April 10 and May 10, 1996. Though lacking the validity of a true scientifically-selected
random survey, the study nevertheless provides an interesting and widely-respected
"snapshot" of who's using the giant computer network.
Complete results are available at
http://www.cc.gatech.edu/gvu/user_surveys/survey-04-1996/ Other results
include:
- PAYING FOR INFORMATION: More than 65 percent of
the respondents said they would not be
willing to pay for access to information on the Web. This may be
bad news for Web sites planning to generate revenue from their users,
and will likely mean tough competition among information providers trying
to attract those willing to pay.
"As the number of Web sites continues to grow, it is becoming more
difficult to attract the attention of users," Pitkow noted. "If there's
going to be competition for subscribers, the ones that will win are
those that have million- dollar production budgets. There will be
a filtering effect."
Resistance to paying for Web information has been increasing over
time, as shown in previous GVU surveys. Pitkow speculates that since
many people are now paying for access the Web itself, they may resent
paying an additional fee for the material they seek. And since browsing
and entertainment are primary activities, the information obtained
may simply not be valuable enough to justify a fee.
The good news is that the competition will likely help improve the
quality of materials offered on the Web. "People's expectations are
being raised about the kinds of things they can get on the Web and
the quality they should expect," Kehoe noted. "They expect pages to
be professional, up-to-date, accurate and slick."
- COMPETITION FOR LEISURE TIME: Web surfing is successfully
competing with traditional media for leisure time. More than a third
of the respondents (36 percent) said that on a daily basis, they surfed
the Web rather than watching television.
"We are going from channel clicking to mouse clicking," explained
Pitkow. "These are surprising numbers on the impact the Web is having
on leisure time and the choices it is forcing people to make. Entertainment
was certainly not a part of the original plans for the Web."
In addition to interactivity, the Web offers what television never
will: immediate access to more than 200,000 different programming
sites, Kehoe noted.
- ACCESS FROM HOME; PAYING FOR SERVICE: More than
half (55 percent) of the respondents
accessed the Web primarily from home and (57 percent) are
paying their own bills for doing so. Over 80 percent access the
Web
on a daily basis, mostly using it for browsing and entertainment.
Fifty-five percent of the respondents
obtained their Internet access from a local or large national service
provider.
- SHOPPING ON THE WEB: For the first time, interest
in
Web shopping showed a small increase. In the new survey, 15 percent
of respondents cited on-line shopping as an important Web activity,
up from 11 percent in previous studies. Browsing (79 percent) and entertainment
(64 percent) were still the
dominant uses.
- CONFIDENTIALITY OF USER DEMOGRAPHIC DATA: As advertiser
interest in the Web grows, the importance of obtaining accurate demographic
data about users also increases -- and raises important issues about
the confidentiality of the information users provide.
The survey found that very
few users understand all the information that can be recorded
without their knowledge when they access a site. However, by a large
majority, users believe they should have a
right to control their demographic information, though most (79
percent) didn't object to providing data if they knew how it would
be used.
"What this points to is an educational process that needs to happen
on the Web," Pitkow said. "Terms and conditions need to be defined
for how demographic information may be used."
- GIVING FALSE INFORMATION: Yet another question calls
into doubt the validity of information being gathered: 26 percent of
the respondents admitted
falsifying information provided when registering at Web sites.
- PROBLEMS OF THE WEB: Asked about the
problems of the Web, 80 percent of the respondents cited the speed
of obtaining information. Pitkow suggests that Web users' willingness
to access pages over slow modem lines demonstrates the strong attraction
of the new medium.
The cost of maintaining a Web account was not among the top issues
cited, perhaps because the
average household income of Web users is $59,000.
- MONITOR SIZE: More than half the users accessed
the Web using
computer monitors smaller than 15 inches. Designers developing Web
pages on high-resolution 21-inch monitors should remember that few users
can match their equipment level, Pitkow noted.
- USE OF JAVA: The respondents didn't have much faith
in the
security of Java, a new programming language used to provide interactivity
on the Web. "We still have a long way to go before people will trust
Java," Pitkow added.
For the first time, the GVU survey used a Java applet to help customize
questions. Since its start, the survey has relied on adaptive questioning
to tailor each batch of questions to the respondents' previous responses.
The Java applet allowed customization to be done question by question.
- GENERAL DEMOGRAPHICS: Other statistics about respondents:
RESEARCH NEWS AND PUBLICATIONS OFFICE
Georgia Institute of Technology
75 Fifth Street, N.W., Suite 100
Atlanta, Georgia 30308
MEDIA RELATIONS CONTACTS:
John Toon (404-894-6986);
Internet: john.toon@edi.gatech.edu;
FAX: (404-894-4545)
WRITER: John Toon
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