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by ocdtrekkie 1419 days ago
So, my grandmother knows drastically less about computers than she used to. She actually previously used email with regularity, and has since forgotten about even the existence of the email account she had for fifteen years. Unless we have a cure for memory loss in seniors, new less computer literate people will be occurring every day.

So the answer is, unfortunately, never. There will always be people who are not computer literate, and if we want basic services to be available via the Internet, as many government services now are, we have to include systems that include these people.

You can't just discard the poor because they aren't computer literate.

1 comments

The problem is that "friendly" systems designed for the computer illiterate tends to be obstructive and unproductive for the vast majority of everybody else and that holds just as much in a real-life office as it does on a computer screen.

The term of computer illiteracy is useful in more than one way, and that is literacy. We don't structure our societies (including basic government services) around people who cannot read, instead, we we structure them around the understanding that the average citizen can read, and treat regular illiteracy as a problem to be solved, and in the first world where computer literacy is even a problem that can exist, it mostly has.