The internet won’t make you dinner or give you a massage, but nearly one in four Americans - 24 percent - say it can serve as a substitute for a significant other for some period of time, according to a poll by 463 Communications and Zogby International, writes sister site MarketingCharts.
The poll showed that the percentage was highest among singles, of which 31 percent said the internet could be a substitute, the Zogby/463 Internet Attitudes poll found (see table).
There was no difference in response among males and females, but there was a split based on political ideology: 31 percent of those who called themselves “progressives” were open to the internet’s serving as a surrogate significant other; only 18 percent of those who consider themselves “very conservative” would consider it a substitute.
The Zogby/463 Internet Attitudes poll examined views of what role the internet plays in people’s lives and whether government should play a greater role in regulating it. The online survey was conducted Oct. 4-8, 2007 and included 9,743 adult respondents nationwide.
Government regulation of internet video
“Some view the internet as their new best friend, others as an increasingly powerful tool that can infect our youth with harmful images and thoughts and therefore must be controlled,” said 463 partner Tom Galvin. “Our challenge as a society is to let the internet flourish as a dynamic force in our economy and communities while not chipping away at the fundamental freedoms that created the internet [as it now is] in the first place.”
Other findings
The second installment of the Zogby/463 Internet Attitudes poll will focus on attitudes about the internet’s future and its role in addressing the energy issue and impact on global economies.
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