Keywords: Community networks, INVIL, South Korea.
Abstract: In this paper, we will discuss (1) past, present, and future of the community network in the United States
with an analytic framework of the community network lifecycle (2) planning and implementation of the
INVIL project, a South Korean version of the community network; (3) similarities and dissimilarities
between those two for comparison in terms of expected benefits, and (4) recommendations based on our
analysis. Contributions of this paper are two folds: helping the South Korean government to improve the
INVIL project and other governments to learn lessons on similar projects as part of their e-government
programs.
1 INTRODUCTION
South Korea ranked first in the world in terms of
broadband penetration with 21.3 subscriptions per
100 inhabitants (ITU, p.5). Thanks to the well-
developed IT infrastructure, three quarters of South
Korean households had access to the high-speed
Internet services. However, the high-speed Internet
network is concentrated in urban areas rather than
agricultural/fishing villages in remote regions. These
areas isolated from the benefits of the Internet and e-
government services are not able to access the
advanced network, but also have limited opportunity
to have IT training. For this reason, the South
Korean government has been implementing the
Information Network Village (INVIL) project as
part of its e-government program to bridge digital
divide between regions and social classes. The main
effort of the INVIL project is to lay the foundation
for the information have-nots to have the equal
access to government services as the information
haves via e-Government.
2 COMMUNITY NETWORKS
As the Internet has become a more important
element of everyday life, a number of communities
have sought to go further, not only providing free
access but also improving the network infrastructure
within the community. The goals of such wired
communities are to bring Internet access into the
homes of all community residents, to provide
various information and services through Internet,
and to facilitate training/education in information
technology and in some cases, the growth of
computer-related industries within the community.
2.1 Cleveland Free-Net
With one phone line in 1984, the School of
Medicine at Case Western Reserve University
developed an online bulletin board where patients
could contact doctors and get answers to medical
questions (Cleveland Free-net). Since the
experiment proved successful, it was expanded to
serve the whole Cleveland area as a community
information resource not only on medicine but also
on law, education, arts, and government. In 1986 it
was named the Cleveland Free-Net (CFN) to provide
free e-mail accounts, access to community
information, and access to the Internet through
dialup modems. Subsequently, it had been stabilized
successfully as witnessed in its steady growth to
have over 36,000 active accounts in 1992. However,
it faced a challenge of sustainability when new
development in ICT made its system and services
COMPARISON BETWEEN COMMUNITY NETWORKS
IN U.S.A. AND IN SOUTH KOREA
J. H. Im
Department of Management, Sacred Heart University, 5151 Park Ave. airfield, CT 06825, USA
Jin-Wan Seo
Department of Public Administration, University of Incheon, Nam-Ku, DoHwa-Dong 177, Incheon, South Korea
228
H. Im J. and Seo J. (2007).
COMPARISON BETWEEN COMMUNITY NETWORKS IN U.S.A. AND IN SOUTH KOREA.
In Proceedings of the Third International Conference on Web Information Systems and Technologies - Society, e-Business and e-Government /
e-Learning, pages 228-232
DOI: 10.5220/0001273902280232
Copyright
c
SciTePress
obsolete and outdated. Coping with changes in the
ICT infrastructure, it failed to transform into a
sustainable business model by neither securing
reliable funding sources for free services nor turning
into a profit-generating model. Lack of funding to
upgrade and operate CFN eventually resulted in
closure in 1999. CFN is considered the pioneer of
Free-nets and community networks. 170 sites in the
United States, 64 in Canada, 9 in the United
Kingdom are listed at the Web site of
http://www.lights.com/freenet.
2.2 Public Electronic Network
The Public Electronic Network (PEN) was begun by
the city of Santa Monica, California in February
1989. One distinctive difference between CFN and
PEN is that the former was initiated by a local
university, but the latter by a municipal government.
PEN’s original purpose was to link residents to the
city hall so that they could have access to public
information like city schedule and events. Soon, it
was evolved into one of the first community
networks with online discussion forums where
residents exchanged their opinions on social and
political issues, thus increasing their awareness of
and participation in local government affairs
(Dutton, 1996). It has further transformed into a full-
fledged e-government portal for the city by
providing a broad range of civil services including
online transactions such as payment of parking
tickets and application for business licenses (Doctor
& Dutton, 1998).
2.3 Blacksburg Electronic Village
In view of the Internet's potential to increase civic
participation and improve the local economy,
Blacksburg Electronic Village (BEV) was
established in October 1993 with the involvement of
all the major institutions in the community: Virginia
Polytechnic Institute and State University, a local
telephone company, and the municipal government.
BEV was institutionalized as a community network
where all activities in a normal community – from
politics to business and social organizing – could be
conducted online (Cohil & Kavanaugh, 1997). Now
it has transformed to a community portal for
residents and visitors and a local ISP by providing
fee-based Internet services for email accounts, civic
and personal web site hosting, website development
and support, etc.
2.4 Seattle Community Network
The Seattle Community Network (SCN) was
founded in May 1994 by volunteers as a free public-
access computer network for information access and
exchange among residents in Seattle. For community
building and empowerment, it provides free services
for email accounts and website hosting for personal
and non-profit organizations (Schuler, 1996).. Its
community pages list websites of local non-profit
organizations by topic. Since it has been strictly
financed with donations and staffed by volunteers,
its services are relatively limited in comparison with
BEV.
3 INVIL PROJECT IN SOUTH
KOREA
3.1 Planning
South Korea’s INVIL system is a government-
sponsored community network system which
consists of many locally-based community
networks. The South Korean government initiated
the INVIL system with three major objectives:
reducing digital divide, empowering village
residents, and boosting regional economy. Digital
divide, discrepancy between the information haves
and the have-nots, may occur by gender, race, age,
generation, geographic location, education level,
income level, and occupation. Agricultural and
fishing villages are typically located in distant areas
where Internet infrastructure is relatively
underdeveloped than urban areas. As part of the e-
government program by the South Korean
government, the INVIL system is to address regional
digital divide (Im & Seo, 2005) (Shin, 2006).
3.2 Implementation
The INVIL project has started from 2001. Since the
launch in 2001, the INVIL project has produced 25
networked villages in the 1
st
phases (2001. 3 ~ 2002.
5), 78 in the 2
nd
phase (2002. 6 ~ 2003. 6), 88 in the
3
rd
phase (2004. 1 ~ 2004. 10), and 89 in the 4
th
phase (2005.6 – 2006. 2). As such, currently there
are 191 INVILs nationwide. The budget spent on
this project was about 67.5 billion won. The first
phase was comprised of 19 villages aided by the
central government and 6 villages aided by local
governments. The third, in line with the ‘Balanced
Development’ policy of the Noh Moo-Hyun
government, further developed the model cases of
the second phase on a mid- and long-term basis and
promoted more diversified programs within the
project. The third phase comprises 4 villages of an
urban model and 80 villages of an agricultural and
fishery model. The agricultural and fishery model
can be divided into 34 villages using the small-scale
COMPARISON BETWEEN COMMUNITY NETWORKS IN U.S.A. AND IN SOUTH KOREA
229
model and 46 villages using the mid- to large-scale
model.
From the initial stage of INVIL project, the project
has been approached strategically. First,
‘Information Network Village Planning Group’ was
formulated consisting of related central
government’s ministries and organizations such as
the Ministry of Agriculture and Forestry, the
Ministry of Information and Communication, the
Ministry of Education and Human Resources
Development, the Agricultural Cooperatives, and the
Fisheries Cooperatives to make sure of close
cooperation among relevant organizations. Second,
the central government organizations and local
governments (Province/County, and City/District)
divided their roles. The central government drew the
blueprint for the project, secured budget and support,
prepared the legal, policy foundation and established
a collaboration system for related organizations. And
local authorities worked on building information
contents, pursuing the information utilization
environment project by village and providing
resident training/education. Third, from the very
beginning of the project, local residents' active
engagement was emphasized. ‘INVIL Operation
Committee’ was formulated for each village with 15
or so resident representatives. The committee
determined critical issues regarding the information
village operation.
The creation of profit model was also encouraged, so
that the committee is able to stand on its own foot as
a self-sustainable body even after the government
support for the project is over. And fourth, pilot
INVIL sites were selected to evenly represent urban
areas, agricultural/fishing villages and mountainous
villages. In consideration of unique local
characteristics, INVIL models were carefully
designed in line with local needs and spread
nationwide after evaluation. As a result, each
information network village has had high-speed
Internet network infrastructure and a village
information center to have access to information and
have chance to IT training/education for local
residents. Three-tiered approach to the INVIL
project is summarized in table 1.
4 COMPARISON & SUMMARY
Venkatesh (2003) proposed a lifecycle framework
for research and action with three stages of origin,
stabilization, and transformation. A community
network comes to existence to meet certain
networking and information needs of a local
community. Once up and running, a community
network has a tendency to “become
institutionalized-stabilized, with formally defined
functions, and governance structures-and resistant to
change more readily than do applications”
(Venkatesh, 2003, p.343). It is necessary for a
community network to be transformed properly by
adapting to changes either in community’s needs or
in its ICT infrastructure. Otherwise, a community
network may lose its vitality and die out eventually.
The lifecycle framework is applied to four major
community networks in the United States and to the
INVIL project in South Korea to see how they were
originated, stabilized, and transformed for
comparison purpose. Life cycles of INVIL and the
four community networks are summarized in Table
2.
Both the community networks in U.S.A. and the
INVIL project in Korea were initiated primarily to
reduce digital divide. However they have more
dissimilarities than similarities. First, community
network was planned as a bottom-up approach by
volunteer-based non-government organizations
(NGO) while INVIL was as a top-down approach by
the South Korean government. The central
government is in charge of planning and provision
of infrastructure of an INVIL while the INVIL’s
central council and a village operation committee
take care of contents and daily operations and
Table 1: Three-Tiered Approach to the INVIL Project.
Central & Local Governments Central Council Village Operation Committee
Planning -Setting goals
-Selection of candidate villages
-Funding for infrastructure
Implementation
-Development of infrastructure
-Setting up village info centers
-Provision of PCs and software
-Design of Web templates
-Development of contents
-User education management
Operation
- Education
- Server operation and management
-Central contents
-E-commerce transaction
processing
-Local operation
-Village contents
-Village e-commerce products
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maintenance. Thus, the central planning and
implementation provides advantages such as
reliable funding, consistency, and economy of
scale that are not possible for those volunteer-
based, independent community networks. Second,
community networks focus on underprivileged
residents in urban areas while INVIL on those in
rural areas. Third, a community network is
independent and autonomous though it may join a
free network association for information sharing
and cooperation. In contrast, an INVIL is not
independent but part of the INVIL Federation
under the auspices of the South Korean
government. Comparison between INVIL and
community networks are summarized in Table 3.
Both community networks and INVIL has the
same challenge: how to develop a self-sustainable
business model as an on-going concern. Securing
reliable and consistent funding is the main
challenge of community networks in view of its
premise of providing free services as witnessed in
those four networks discussed earlier. Though the
INVIL project has been funded by the South
Korean government, the operation of each INVIL
is delegated, thus should be self-sustainable at a
certain point by generating its own revenue.
Otherwise, an INVIL will be vulnerable to any
change in the government funding. Also, the South
Korean government should consider an assessment
system to evaluate regularly an existing INVIL as
a self-sustainable business model. Otherwise,
government funds may be wasted for some INVILs
that may not be justifiable.
Table 2: Life Cycle of INVIL and Community Networks.
INVIL CFN PEN BEV SCN
Start year 2001 1986 1989 1993 1994
Initiator Government University Volunteers University Volunteers
Community Rural Urban Urban Urban Urban
Life Cycle
1. Origin
Community
ISP
Free net Free net Free net Free net
2. Stabilization Community
portal
Community
ISP
Community
forum
Community
ISP
Community
ISP
3. Transformation Community
portal &
e-Commerce
(Phased out in
1994)
e-Government Community
ISP & portal
Community
ISP
Table 3: Comparison between INVIL and Community Networks.
INVIL Community Networks
Initiator Government NGO
Planning Top-down Bottom-up
Focus Rural community Urban community
Organization Federal Independent
Operation Hybrid Community
Pros -Central planning
-Nation-wide network
-Government funding
-Economy of scale
-Volunteer-based
-Local ownership
-Autonomous
Cons -Government-regulated
-Dependency
-Lack of funding
-Regional
-No central planning
Challenges -Sustainable business model - Sustainable business model
COMPARISON BETWEEN COMMUNITY NETWORKS IN U.S.A. AND IN SOUTH KOREA
231
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