Because every American
should have access
to broadband Internet.

The Internet Innovation Alliance is a broad-based coalition of business and non-profit organizations that aim to ensure every American, regardless of race, income or geography, has access to the critical tool that is broadband Internet. The IIA seeks to promote public policies that support equal opportunity for universal broadband availability and adoption so that everyone, everywhere can seize the benefits of the Internet - from education to health care, employment to community building, civic engagement and beyond.

Library

IIA Broadband Fact Book

Broadband Fact Book

Here you'll find convenient research items culled from the best broadband data sources. If you need to find bite-sized talking points on a tight deadline, you're in the right place. We've already done the hard part for you!

Research Area Achieving Universal Broadband

Deployment of 4G Technology Could Help U.S. Achieve Universal Broadband Service

The deployment of 4G technology could help the nation achieve universal broadband service by ensuring that this service becomes quickly available to many rural Americans who currently lack high-speed connectivity.  4G-enabled mobile services could also provide a less costly way for lower- and moderate-income Americans to access broadband.

Tags:

“The Employment Effects of Advances in Internet and Wireless Technology: Evaluating the Transitions from 2G to 3G and from 3G to 4G”

Over 36 percent of rural households with dial-up Internet access do not adopt broadband because it is not available in the area.

Tags: rural, achieving universal broadband, broadband adoption, broadband access, internet, broadband expansion, dial-up

Exploring the Digital Nation: Home Broadband and Internet Adoption in the United States.

28% of rural Americans without broadband say broadband is not available where they live.

28% of rural adult Americans without home high-speed say broadband isn’t available where they live, in contrast to 22% of non-rural Americans without broadband who say this. Moreover, 24% of dial-up users in rural areas say having the service available where they live would prompt a switch to broadband; this compares to the 14% figure for all respondents, according to the Pew Internet Project.

Tags: achieving universal broadband, pew internet project, rural access

ZD Net, IT Facts, September 29th, 2008

Roughly one-third of households in rural America cannot subscribe to broadband Internet services at any price.

Tags: achieving universal broadband, poverty, rural america, broadband internet

Peha, Jon M. Bringing Broadband to Unserved Communities. Part of The Hamilton Project, Advancing Opportunity, Prosperity and Growth. (Washington DC: The Brookings Institution). May, 2008. – 56 pages

Changes enabled by universal broadband— e-commerce, telecommuting, teleconferencing and paper reduction—could cut more than 1 billion tons of greenhouse gas emissions over 10 years.

If these greenhouse reductions were converted into energy saved, then IT applications could save 555 million barrels of oil by year 10, or roughly 11 percent of the oil imported into the United States today.

Tags: achieving universal broadband, environment, e-commerce, telecommuting, teleconferencing, greenhouse gas emissions

Fuhr, Joseph P., & Pociask, Stephen B. Broadband Services: Economic and Environmental Benefits, The American Consumer Institute, 2007
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