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March 08, 2005

The Pew Internet and American Life Project report on The Internet and Campaign 2004 found:

49% of all internet users (and 56% of those who get political news online) said “the internet has raised the overall quality of public debate” during the campaign and only 5% said the internet lowered the quality of debate. Some 36% said the internet did not make much of a difference.
It adds:
For online Americans, the internet is now a more important source of campaign news and information than radio: 28% of internet users cited the internet as a prime source of campaign news compared to 17% of them who cited radio. For those with broadband at home (a group comprising 27% of the overall U.S. population) the internet rivals newspapers as a major source of campaign news and information: 38% of those with broadband at home cited the internet as a major source of political news, compared to 36% of them who cited newspapers.
The report also comes with commentary.

Via PJNet Today


Originally from PJNet Today, remediated by yatta on Mar 8, 2005 at 02:47 AM