Millions of elderly Brits without a smartphone or internet getting ‘left behind’ in digital age

https://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-14951537/Millions-elderly-Brits-without-smartphone-internet-left-behind.html

Posted by OGSyedIsEverywhere

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24 Comments

  1. They’re also legislating and over-regulating the same tech that they don’t understand and aren’t using. Can’t say I empathise.

  2. John_Williams_1977 on

    The internet has been a part of everyday life for 25 years.

    As a society, it’s not our responsibility to manage everyone else’s lives.

    Sorry, just saw someone that doesn’t know how to drive. Going to kidnap them and force them to learn.

  3. DennisAFiveStarMan on

    It’s sad to see. Saw an old woman in tears other day trying to pay for her parking with machine out of order and ‘pay by app’ stuff pushed at her

  4. They’re also the types to think there’s nothing wrong with the online safety act, also have a tripled locked pension, also probably own property, what am I meant to do, feel sorry for these people?

  5. Harrry-Otter on

    The internets been in common usage for about 30 years. It’s not that surprising that if you don’t adapt at all in 3 decades, you start getting left behind.

  6. whatmichaelsays on

    >And 31 per cent – or 4 million elderly people – said that poor IT skills prevented them from using the internet.

    Maybe it’s easier to say this as someone who grew up in a later generation, but maybe we stop making excuses for people who won’t learn basic IT skills?

    We’re not talking about asking grannies to code here – just very simple things with very simple interfaces.

    We shouldn’t just allow people to say “oh, but I’m rubbish with computers;” (often with a weird sort of pride) as some sort of safe-phrase to hold back progress.

  7. spacecrustaceans on

    >While Janet, 74, said: ‘I have given up on trying to get Dr appointments, so now just don’t bother.

    >‘Since I had a total knee replacement two months ago, I had to do without any pain relief at all as I could not contact them. And as my mobility is now severely restricted, I cannot visit them, so I just don’t go.’

    Which GP is strictly ‘online only’ for booking GP appointments? I extremely doubt there is one, in fact – GP contractors are required under the NHS (General Medical Services Contracts) Regulations to ensure patients can contact the practice by **telephone**. I understand that many elderly people struggle with technology. I’ve volunteered at my local library, helping older residents learn how to use smartphones, tablets, email, and other digital tools. But in some cases, the barrier isn’t a lack of ability or understanding, it’s outright refusal. Some people simply won’t try.

    My grandma, for example, has a perfectly good tablet. Several family members, myself included, have spent time patiently showing her how to use it. Yet she flat-out refuses to engage with it. She insists that my uncle handle everything for her, especially online banking, ever since her local bank closed. It’s not that she’s incapable; she just won’t make the effort. And I suspect she’s not alone. I think this attitude is more common than people realise. It’s not always about struggling to learn. Sometimes, it’s about refusing to even try. It’s almost as if some believe the world should stay the same just for them, and that it should revolve entirely around their needs, even as the rest of the world moves forward.

  8. Worldly_Client_7614 on

    Millions of young brits needing to work two jobs to afford rent, smartphone bills and the internet are getting left behind so the elderly can keep rich.

    Out of sympathy for the elderly & big companies, you got all the cash in the world and have pushed the young brits of today into a hole.

  9. I know reddit is very anti-elderly but in their defence, not everything you encounter in day to day life should require QR codes, accounts, signing up to a mailing list, access codes only available on an app (e.g. my gym) etc just for using some of the most basic services or purchasing simple things.

    I’m only 31 and even I’m starting to get fed up of apps, codes, the internet being everywhere and sometimes refusing to bother learning new functions.

  10. Its more pervasive than it seems. My phone isn’t super old, Im making posts on it now but I can’t download the app my bank provides because it’s “not compatible”. Many tech providers in my industry are refusing to help with software installed on Windows 10 systems because they “no longer support” it despite it being just the previous version of windows.

    There’s a creeping insistence in tech for you to upgrade everything immediately or they simply make things difficult for you. What does an elderly person need with an internet capable smartphone happily transmitting all their data to advertisers to be sold? They usually just want to be able to pay their bills and live without tons of admin hassling them. Honestly I want the same thing.

  11. Consistent-Pirate-23 on

    Online is great for a lot of things but it’s being pushed too far.

    Oh and chatbots can get in the bin

  12. universalpsykopath on

    Web Developer here: every time we make service online only, we’ve excluding someone, and not just people who don’t *want* to learn.

    * People with learning disabilities
    * People with severe dyslexia
    * Blind people (Screen Reader Accessibility has gone backwards in the last decade, mainly due to poor implementations of React).
    * People who can’t afford a smartphone, or can’t afford to keep it topped up with data.

    Digital exclusion is real, and it’s a real problem.

  13. Stolen_Showman on

    They’ll be up the creek trying to understand the Online Safety Act then.

    Ripe for scammers. Then there’s all the “Tech Support” scams, and the emails saying their computer has been breached for ransom, genuine ransomware, trojans, fake applications with SEO, and all the social media conning them out of their personal details.

    They’re better off with dumb phones and no internet, really, because antivirus and antimalware won’t protect them.

  14. Brave_Minimum9741 on

    Working in a customer facing role is alot of the time helping old people use their own mobile phones.

    I’m sorry our app isn’t working properly for you, is it because you don’t know how to check your own emails? No I don’t know what your password is.

  15. Odd_Duck8696 on

    My grandfather passed 6 years ago. He was 91 years old.

    He was the most tech savvy person in my family. When the internet came along he read as many magazines about how to use it and would pass this on to the rest of the family.

    I think I was the only one to listen to him, the rest of my family are absolutely useless when it comes to using any technology.

  16. Radiant-Mycologist72 on

    I’m quite looking forward to retirement and throttling back on my participation in the ‘digital age’

  17. It’s interesting because on one hand I have the view that it’s not the governments job to pander.

    On the other hand I genuinely do feel sorry for people.

    I’m in my late 30s, and my family were REALLY early adopters. We had a PC at home from about 1993 onwards. At that time, I was essentially the only person in my class who had one, but even by the time we went to secondary school in 1999 it wasn’t normal for everyone to have a computer. Even at University, plenty of my classmates didn’t have their own laptop or computer, and plenty had to use the library computers.

    I think we’re either really bad at remembered when things became commonplace (my phone had buttons until 2012), or imagining what it’s like not being able to use or do something, and the overwhelming task of having to learn to do it.

  18. There seems to be a few anti empathy people in the comments.

    I was on the internet before some of you knew the internet existed.

    You were able to catch up because you were young. But for many older people technology is from another world.

    There needs to be alternative support for vulnerable groups, including disabled people who have also been pushed to the side – even though that’s against the law.

  19. I’m a software engineer and even I feel like I keep getting left behind.

    It’s unacceptable for major services to claim they are keeping up with the digital age, and then releasing a shitty unoptimized webapp that requires a new iPhone or Windows 10 to run on. Most online users in the UK have neither. Even more worringly are sites that fail to work on any browser other than Google Chrome. And slightly less worse, websites that fail to run on a browser release not released within the past year because it uses some shitty bloated framework for no reason that shits the bed due to lack of version control.

    Government services, NHS services, local GP, heck even utility companies, are all guilty of pushing out these backwards bloated abominations that most users cant even access on their perfectly working modern devices.

    It’s unfair for commenters to call out “old people” for refusing to adapt. We should be calling out the companies for refusing to adhere to established basic web standards that they should have learned and codified 25 years ago. Why did my fucking GP Surgery website force redirect asking me to update my browser when the browser update is a 5th decimal update that fixes a UI bug? Those are the questions we should be asking. Incompetence masked as superiority.

    Although conversely, out of sheer spite, instead of updating I did what I needed to do through the dev console. So perhaps my opinions are a little skewed.

    Regardless I have more sympthathy for the average person forced to use these garbage webapps than the people shitting them out. People who refuse to engage with tech or read the fucking screen are infuriating to deal with IMO, but how can we expect people to learn computer literacy when there are no standards followed to learn, webapps slower and more popups than a 2000s backwater webpage, and forced unnecessary updates to their software and hardware that changes the GUI so often that you basically have a different interface every few years or so?

  20. hfFvx4G6xU4ZEgzhSM9g on

    Maybe they’ve got it right to avoid it. The downfall of the internet is in full swing.

  21. the elephant in the room is the onset of Alzheimer’s it doesnt matter how.many smart phones pcs and email accounts they have then nor how long they’ve had them for

    forgetting passwords, and memorable words especially when its 3rd 7th 9th character type inputs  where just keeping track of how far along the word they’ve counted becomes a task in itself

    2 factor authentication, 

    involved procedures, 

    “please wait a moment If you are not directed to the next screen click here” a ‘moment’ becomes one or two seconds Not the give this a full minute or two, that other people would interpret it as. 

    the more familiar/comfortable they were in the past the more difficult it becomes -people for whom managing  multiple accounts ones for paying bills,  ones for savings, ones for pensions etc coming in was second nature

    suddenly that turns into
    suspended logins, frozen accounts, inability to manage any payments that relied on manual intervention each month etc

    the whole system then breaks down very quickly