Tese
Degradês de conectividade: infraestrutura de internet e desigualdades territoriais da midiatização
Fecha
2023-03-27Autor
Fanfa, Mauricio de Souza
Institución
Resumen
The infrastructure of the Internet is the theme of this thesis. We highlight its social aspects,
especially the characteristics and inequalities of its infrastructure as a conditioning factor of the
mediatization process. The research problem is exposed in the following question: how are
spacialities and media infrastructures related when taken as elements that express and reinforce
inequalities and colonialities? The thesis aims to generally track agents and gather data and
issues related to spaciality and Internet infrastructure. Specific objectives begin with the
purpose of articulating knowledge capable of updating and problematizing the generalization
of Internet connection and the debate on digital inclusion. Another specific objective is to
question the common notion that the Internet is ubiquitous and problematize its universalizing
claim. The empirical object of study is defined by the Internet infrastructure. Empirically, we
work with data from multiple sources about connectivity and Internet access in Brazil. The
thesis justifies itself by considering that the Internet constitutes an environment of proven
potential for development, at the same time demonstrates ambiguities. Its expansive
relationship with society should be nuanced and criticized. We also aim to make considerations
that serve for the instruction and qualification of the posture of entities, technology criticism,
private sector oversight, Internet governance, public policies, digital inclusion actions, and
education and awareness. We seek to define our thesis through the following statement: the
Internet infrastructure is conditioned by territorial, political, technical-scientific, and market
issues. As a producer of a non-innovative landscape of territorial differences, the material
expansion of the Internet is motivated by underlying interests that articulate themselves far
beyond opportunity and demand and as a result of the modernity/coloniality relation. We
present indexes and maps developed and analyzed that refer to the Brazilian Internet
infrastructure. The history and management of the submarine cables that connect Brazil are also
analyzed. Methodologically, this is a study of media infrastructure aligned with critical studies
in Innovation Diffusion. Infrastructure studies have a multi-methodological sensitivity derived
from Science, Technology, and Society studies (STS). Thus, we dialogue with aspects of ActorNetwork Theory and material semiotics. We combine this perspective with aspects of public
policy analysis and document analysis. The maps and indexes developed consider data such as
download rates, availability of broadband, among others. Connectivity data of the Brazilian
regions and municipalities are compared, showing distinctions between adjacent and remote,
urban and rural cities and regions. We identify and comment on the large advancement in
Internet infrastructure recorded in the Midwest Region and the Amazon agricultural frontier
between 2020-2022. From these observations, aspects of digital exclusion, colonialism,
mediatization, globalization, modernization, territorial identities or the history of
communications are discussed.