The digital divide is a myth that yesterday, computer seems to be a luxury item. Today, most people believe that they are indispensable for their lives. This constantly changing technical concept forms a front for governments and private agencies around the world. The study showed that a serious problem called "digital divide" is paralyzed by the American population. Unless the government intervenes, we even have research that predicts we will face misfortune and frustration. There is no end of the hidden world in this problem, there is no need to waste money.
We try to show that knowledge gaps and Digital Divide discourse implicitly develop technology-driven social development myths. In this case, elderly people have hindered the rapid development of the information society, and the information society is striving to exclude social barriers and provide various electronic services. At the individual level, it is no doubt that the elderly can gain personal benefit through the Internet. At the social level, traditional face-to-face services will decrease as e-banking and e-Government services expand. To some extent, some older network adopters unwillingly contribute to the decline of the living environment of non-Internet users of their generation.
Digital divide, a term used to describe the uneven distribution of information and communication technology (ICT) in society. In the digital divide, the difference between computer and the Internet (1) access (global divide) (primary digital divide) and use (secondary digital divide) between developed countries and developing countries, and (2) single and diverse socioeconomic Group state (social disparity), and (3) political participation of different types of users on the Internet (democratic disparity). In summary, these differences can be attributed to the continuing information or knowledge gap between people ("rich") who access and use new media, and those who do not (worsen) social inequality, It is thought that it will produce. .