China Daily Global Edition (USA)

City’sWiFi service just a decoration

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THE BEIJING MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT­introduced a wireless internet service calledMyBe­ijing last year, which was free to use for the first two hours. OnMay 1, that restrictio­n was lifted, and people can now use the service free of charge for as long as they like— at least in theory, since fewpeople have succeeded in accessing the service. Legal Daily comments:

A media investigat­ion found that the main reason people couldn’t access the service is because the bandwidth is too narrow to allow more than 20 people to use it at the same time at each site. At present the service is provided at 943 sites around the city.

It means at most 20,000 people can enjoy the service, in a city with more than 20 million residents.

It is unknown why the authoritie­s keep the bandwidth at such a low level, as it is obviously of little use to the public.

However, one thing is certain, and that is the government that has bragged about its “achievemen­t” of providing a public service, as free and convenient wireless internet access is a standard feature of modern cities.

In sharp contrast withMyBeij­ing is the free wireless internet access provided by Zhongguanc­un, China’s Silicon Valley, in Beijing’sHaidian district, whose bandwidth is 2,500 times that ofMyBeijin­g.

The Beijing government said it will build the city into a first-class internatio­nal metropolis and a model for the other Chinese cities.

To realize that objective, it must first become a first-class city government. ButMyBeiji­ng’s narrow bandwidth just shows how far it is from being that. Compared with the other cities, Beijing has stronger financial and technologi­cal strengths, but no greater desire to serve the people. Otherwise, MyBeijing would not be just a decoration gracing the government’s achievemen­t list, and nothing else.

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