Greetings Economists,
Amongst various Telecom disasters concerning broadband internet access in
the U.S., the Asian economies avoided the disasters of the U.S. based
collapse.   While there is considerable use of the internet in the U.S. the
wide public affect of visual internet communications has been slow to take
hold in the U.S.   Contrarily, use of the internet has been on a dramatic
rise in South Korea, and elsewhere in Asia, and so on.  This article
speculates upon the political affect of the internet on political activity.
An insight on the growing desire for independence in Asia from U.S. imperial
dominance, and how that is managed in an internet society.
thanks,
Doyle Saylor

In South Korea, it's the mouse that roars

New breed of politician taps the country's love affair
with high tech, GEOFFREY YORK writes
http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/ArticleNews/PEstory/TGAM/20021230/UNETTN
/Headlines/headdex/headdexInternational_temp/4/4/20/

By GEOFFREY YORK of Globe and Mail Toronto, Canada

Monday, December 30, 2002 - Print Edition, Page A3

SEOUL -- The winning candidate in last week's South Korean presidential
election had little need for mass rallies or traditional campaign tactics.

When Roh Moo-hyun's organizers wanted supporters to vote on election day,
they simply pressed a few computer keys. Text messages flashed to the
cellphones of almost 800,000 people, urging them to go to the polls.

During his campaign, millions of voters absorbed Mr. Roh's message from
Internet sites that featured video clips of the candidate and audio
broadcasts by disc jockeys and rock stars. Half a million visitors logged on
to his main Web site every day to donate money or obtain campaign updates.
More than 7,000 voters a day sent him e-mails with policy ideas. Internet
chat groups buzzed with debate on the election.

South Koreans call it "digital democracy" and "e-politics," and they have
become the world's leaders in cyberspace campaigning. Their high-tech boom
has unleashed a new form of grassroots participation by millions of
"Netizens" who exploit the latest information technology to bypass the
once-dominant party machines of the old system.

With the world's highest penetration of high-speed and mobile Internet
services, South Korea is at the cutting edge of technology that is
transforming the political system, making it more open and democratic. It
could be a preview of the shape of Western democracy.

"It's a revolutionary change, and the catalyst of this change is the
Internet," said Huh Houunna, director of Internet campaigning for Mr. Roh,
56, a once-obscure human-rights lawyer who emerged as the unexpected winner
of last week's presidential election.

Almost half of South Korean voters are below the age of 40 -- a prime
demographic for users of the Internet and cellphones. Until this year, many
were apathetic politically, put off by the country's traditional political
machinery. But Mr. Roh reached out to voters with one of the world's most
sophisticated Internet campaigns, and the vast majority of the younger
population voted for him.

Until a year ago, Mr. Roh was best known for his repeated failures to be
elected to parliament. Self-educated, he came from a poor family and had
been jailed for helping dissidents fight the military regimes of the past.
But young voters admired the lawyer for his integrity and his image as an
independent outsider, and they formed an Internet fan club to promote his
future.

The fan club, with 70,000 members, helped launch what has been called "the
Roh typhoon." Its energetic activism was crucial to Mr. Roh's triumph in
last spring's primaries, when he shocked most observers by capturing the
presidential nomination of the ruling party. And it was a crucial factor in
his narrow victory last week.

"It was like a fan club for a movie star," said Sonn Hochul, a political
scientist at Sogang University in Seoul. "The Roh phenomenon was based on
the Internet. It's a new form of political participation, and it has
educated young people about politics. This was an Internet election."

The Internet allowed Mr. Roh to liberate himself from "black money" --
corporate donations that are South Korea's traditional form of campaign
financing. Largely through Internet-based campaign groups, Mr. Roh raised
the equivalent of about $1-billion from more than 180,000 individual donors.

Although Mr. Roh mastered the Internet, other major political parties used
it and other forms of mass communication, too. The parties held an average
of only three rallies a day, compared with 49 a day during the 1997
campaign. Campaigning with loudspeakers on the streets is much less common.

The political element is part of a decade-long technological revolution in
South Korea, where more than half of all homes are plugged into high-speed
broadband Internet connections -- the highest rate in the world. (In most
Western countries, less than 10 per cent of households have broadband
connections.)

About 25 million of South Korea's 48 million people are regular Internet
surfers. All across Seoul, high-rise towers and corporate headquarters are
emblazoned with their Web-site addresses in huge letters or neon signs.
About 30 million South Koreans have cellphones, and 10 million of these
cellphones have Internet connections -- again, a world-leading number.

The broadband revolution began with teenagers. The most popular video games
here are on-line, played simultaneously with hundreds or thousands of
gamers. These require broadband connections -- and companies soon responded
to the demand.

Since most South Koreans live in densely populated urban high-rises, it was
relatively easy to do the wiring.

The Internet has become the most popular way of organizing street rallies,
political and otherwise -- including that of the estimated seven million
South Koreans who swarmed into the streets after the stunning success of
their national soccer team in last summer's World Cup.

More recently, Internet activists mobilized massive anti-American protests
across the country after two girls were accidentally killed by U.S. troops.

Not all South Koreans are happy about the dramatic rise of the Internet.
Critics say that the on-line games create "zombie" teenagers who do not know
how to interact with the real world.

An estimated 5 per cent to 15 per cent of Internet users are addicted to the
Internet.

In one notorious case, a 24-year-old man died in an Internet café after
playing computer games nonstop for 86 hours.

During the election campaign, regulators shut down some Internet sites for
spreading false rumours, conducting illegal polls, or other violations of
election rules.

The newly elected Mr. Roh, however, is promising to use the Internet to make
the government more open and transparent.
 

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