Rebooting the Net: Building a User-First Internet for All Canadians

Canada stands at a pivotal moment in its digital evolution. As underscored by a recent CBC Radio exploration of internet policy and trade, the current digital ecosystem often prioritizes commercial and regulatory players, rather than everyday users. To truly serve all Canadians, we must shift to an intentionally user‑centric internet; one that delivers equitable access, intuitive public services, meaningful privacy, and digital confidence.

Closing the Digital Divide: Beyond Access
While Infrastructure Canada reports 93 % national broadband availability at 50/10 Mbps, rural, Northern and Indigenous communities continue to face significant shortfalls. Just 62 % of rural households enjoy such speeds vs. 91 % of urban dwellers.   Additionally, cost remains a barrier, Canadians pay among the highest broadband prices in the OECD, exacerbated by data caps and limited competition.

Recent federal investments in the Universal Broadband Fund (C$3.2 B) and provincial connectivity strategies have shown gains: 2 million more Canadians connected by mid‑2024, with a 23 % increase in rural speed‑test results. Yet, hardware, affordability, and “last mile” digital inclusion remain hurdles. LEO satellites, advancements already underway with Telesat and others, offer cost-effective backhaul solutions for remote regions.

To be truly user‑focused, Canada must pair infrastructure rollout with subsidized hardware, low-cost data plans, and community Wi‑Fi in public spaces, mirroring what CAP once offered, and should reinvigorate .

Prioritizing Digital Literacy & Inclusion
Access means little if users lack confidence or fluency. Statistics Canada places 24 % of Canadians in “basic” or non‑user categories, with seniors especially vulnerable (62 % in 2018, down to 48 % by 2020). Further, Toronto-based research reveals that while 98 % of households are nominally connected, only precarious skill levels and siloed services keep Canada from being digitally inclusive.

We must emulate Ontario’s inclusive design principle: “When we design for the edges, we design for everyone”. Programs like CAP and modern iterations in schools, libraries, community centres, and First Nations-led deployments (e.g., First Mile initiatives) must be expanded to offer digital mentorship, lifelong e‑skills training, and device recycling initiatives with security support. 

Transforming Public Services with Co‑Design
The Government of Canada’s “Digital Ambition” (2024‑25) enshrines user‑centric, trusted, accessible services as its primary outcome. Yet progress relies on embedding authentic user input. Success stories from Code for Canada highlight the power of embedding designers and technologists into service teams, co‑creating solutions that resonate with citizen realities.  

Additionally, inclusive design guru Jutta Treviranus points out that systems built for users with disabilities naturally benefit all, promoting scenarios that anticipate diverse needs from launch.   Government adoption of accessible UX components, like Canada’s WET toolkit aligned with WCAG 2.0 AA, is commendable, but needs continuous testing by diverse users.

Preserving Openness and Trust
Canada’s 1993 Telecommunications Act prohibits ISPs from prioritizing or throttling traffic, anchoring net neutrality in law. Public support remains high, two‑thirds of internet users back open access. Upholding this principle ensures that small businesses, divisive news outlets, and marginalized voices aren’t silenced by commercial gatekeepers.

Meanwhile, Freedom House still rates Canada among the most open digital nations, though concerns persist about surveillance laws and rural cost differentials. Privacy trust can be further solidified through transparency mandates, public Wi‑Fi privacy guarantees, and clear data‑minimization standards where user data isn’t exploited post‑consent.

Cultivating a Better Digital Ecosystem
While Canada’s Connectivity Strategy unites government, civil society, and industry, meaningful alignment on digital policy remains uneven.   We need a human‑centred policy playbook: treat emerging tech (AI, broadband, fintech) as programmable infrastructure tied to inclusive economic goals. 

Local governments and Indigenous groups must be empowered as co‑designers, with funding and regulation responsive to community‑level priorities. Lessons from rural digital inclusion show collaborative successes when demand‑side (training, digital culture) and supply‑side (infrastructure, affordability) converge.

Canada’s digital future must be anchored in the user experience. That means:
• Universal access backed by public hardware, affordable plans, and modern connectivity technologies like LEO satellite
• Sustained digital literacy programs, especially for low‑income, elderly, newcomer, and Indigenous populations
• Public service design led by users and accessibility standards
• Firm protection of net neutrality and strengthened privacy regulations
• Bottom‑up: including Indigenous and local, participation in digital policy and infrastructure planning

This is not merely a public service agenda, it’s a growth imperative. By centering users, Canada can build a digital ecosystem that’s trustworthy, inclusive, and innovation-ready. That future depends on federal action, community engagement, and sustained investment, but the reward is a true digital renaissance that serves every Canadian.

We need to Implement Personal Online Data Stores (PODS)

At some level, most of us worry about our personal information being collected, sold, and used by big businesses and other players. We have all heard that “if the app is free then we are the product”. So, what can be done to improve the situation?

Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web, has envisioned a transformative shift in the way individuals manage and share their personal data through a decentralized web, embodied by his Solid project. A key component of this initiative is the concept of a “digital wallet.” Unlike conventional digital wallets focused solely on financial transactions, Berners-Lee’s vision extends far beyond, providing a secure and efficient means for individuals to control their personal data and online identity.

In Berners-Lee’s model, users store their personal information in PODS (personal online data stores) rather than dispersing it across multiple platforms owned by corporations. This digital wallet consolidates all types of data—such as identity documents, health records, financial information, and browsing histories—under the user’s control. The wallet enables selective data sharing, meaning users can provide only the specific information required for a transaction or interaction. For instance, to verify their age for purchasing alcohol, users can confirm their eligibility without revealing unrelated personal details like their home address or full birthdate.

The benefits of this concept are both practical and revolutionary. First and foremost, it significantly enhances privacy. In today’s internet landscape, users often have little choice but to share large amounts of personal data with third parties, leaving them vulnerable to misuse. By giving individuals the ability to control which data are shared, and with whom, Berners-Lee’s digital wallet mitigates unnecessary exposure, and limits the risks associated with data misuse or exploitation.

Second, it reduces the likelihood and impact of data breaches. Currently, large corporations store vast amounts of user data in centralized servers, making them attractive targets for hackers. Decentralizing data storage and empowering individuals to maintain their own data reduces the likelihood of massive breaches, as there is no single repository for hackers to target. This shift also aligns with increasing public concern over cybersecurity and data protection.

Another advantage lies in fostering competition and innovation in the digital economy. Today, tech giants often lock users into proprietary ecosystems, making it difficult to switch services without losing access to valuable data. A decentralized approach, with data stored in user-controlled wallets, eliminates these barriers. Users can easily move between competing platforms while retaining full access to their information, encouraging fair competition and reducing monopolistic control.

The PODS concept also empowers individuals to monetize their data, should they choose to share it. Users can negotiate directly with companies or researchers for specific data-sharing agreements, ensuring transparency and potentially earning compensation for their contributions. This represents a fundamental shift from the current model, where corporations profit from user data without adequately compensating the individuals whose information they exploit.

Ultimately, Berners-Lee’s digital wallet aligns with his broader mission to decentralize the web and return agency to its users. By prioritizing privacy, security, and user empowerment, this concept challenges the existing power dynamics of the internet, offering a blueprint for a fairer and more equitable digital landscape. If widely adopted, it could revolutionize how people manage their digital identities and interact online, fostering trust, innovation, and a renewed sense of autonomy in the digital age.

Now just how we get Big Tech to hand back our data, when it’s currently a major source of revenue, I have no idea, but it’s going to take significant political will. Belgium is currently exploring a healthcare data initiative with 7 million citizens using the PODS model, along with primary care providers and hospitals.  Perhaps we may just have to accept that our data to date is lost in the ether, but moving forward with our next generations, a decentralized web will bring more personal privacy and autonomy? 

The Pros and Cons of Rural High-Speed Internet

November 2024 sees the installation of high-speed fibre internet at the farm. It wasn’t the advertised “simply plug and play” because it never is for a rural property, but we final got there after they realized they still had to hang the fiber along my rural road. As much as I love supporting local businesses, my current ISP has stated on multiple occasions that they have no intention of upgrading my network node. At half the monthly cost of the current line-of-site connection, and literally 150 times faster with unlimited usage, the choice to switch to a “no contract” special offer by one of the big telecoms was a no brainer.

The long-awaited surge of high-speed internet into rural Ontario is poised to change the socio-economic dynamics of these communities. For years, rural areas have lagged behind urban centers in digital connectivity, with the slow or unreliable internet often acting as a barrier to growth. The introduction of high-speed internet marks a shift, bridging the digital divide that has left so many rural residents, and businesses feeling isolated from modern opportunities.

For families, high-speed internet means improved access to online education, healthcare, and government services that are increasingly reliant on a robust digital infrastructure. Students who once struggled with spotty connections for virtual learning can now participate more fully in the digital classroom. Telehealth, a growing need in rural areas where healthcare access can be limited, will become more feasible, offering faster, more reliable consultations with healthcare providers.

Economically, this new connectivity can be transformative. Local businesses, particularly in agriculture and tourism, stand to benefit from streamlined operations, easier access to markets, and the potential to attract remote workers or digital entrepreneurs looking for affordable, peaceful living conditions. Rural Ontario’s ability to compete in a digital-first economy will get a significant boost, encouraging innovation and investment. The North Grenville Mayor Nancy Pickford has proposed that the Kemptville Campus should become an off-site work location for federal employees, while voicing concerning about the Ottawa “back to office work” mandate that would negatively impact the Township’s growing economy. The newly installed fibre in the rural township will enable Pickford’s vision to possibly keep those citizens working and shopping locally.

There are some who feel that the arrival of high-speed internet raises questions about the preservation of rural life. While connectivity opens doors, it may also accelerate the urbanization of these communities, changing the slow-paced, close-knit nature that defines rural living. Local towns and villages, here in eastern Ontario, are expanding rapidly with new suburban-style housing, in part because of the improved infrastructure, including high-speed internet. As rural Ontario embraces the digital world, it must also find a way to balance progress with its traditional values.

Update – Seems the ISP didn’t connect the farm to the correct junction box, and so now I am getting polite messages suggesting I finalize the self-installation process, even though the connection is currently up and running. The technician said he was going to deal with the issue, and so let’s see what happens.

Final Update – All is working perfectly. Apparently because the farm was connected to the wrong box the network assumed I had two hub connections, not just the one I was contracted for, and there was some interference happening. The ISP customer support reset a few switches, and all is now working as it should be. Having 1,500 Mbps instead of 10 Mbps is eye opening.