The digital divide cuts across society and generations. Around a third of the Swiss population has only limited basic digital skills.
As a new study shows, this increasingly includes people with low incomes and little education. These six tips will help you overcome digital deficits:
1. Buy a ticket online
Tickets are always purchased online at home on your computer or via the SBB app on your smartphone.
Ticket machines are easier to use than before, but remain sophisticated.
In an emergency, you can dial the telephone number printed on a machine and receive help.
Various local Pro Senectute sections offer help. Help is also available with tutorials, the short videos on YouTube: enter the keywords “SBB ticket machines” or “SBB app”.
2. Surfing without your own computer
The Internet café Planet 13 in Basel was founded in 2007 by people affected by poverty. It is a place where people affected and at risk of poverty can get help in the digital area: when creating an email account as well as when printing or scanning.
Support is also available with writing applications, CVs or filling out forms. Computer courses are also offered. PCs and laptops are being repaired in an adjoining room.
A query in your own community shows whether there is an institution like Planet13 or another internet café.
3. Use the full potential of laptops etc
The first point of contact are patient family members, including spouses, children, grandchildren and good friends. Many topics are also offered in courses run by various local Pro Senectute sections.
Certain topics are also covered by various private providers. Offers range from half-day courses to larger training courses. Swisscom also offers webinars on various digital topics. The range of topics is wide.
There is help here – a selection
4. Improve reading and writing skills
People who have trouble deciphering the context of a text are at particular risk of being excluded from the digital world. Because more and more digital means more and more written, it is therefore crucial for these people to expand their reading and writing skills.
The Swiss umbrella organization for reading and writing and its affiliated cantonal associations offer courses in reading and writing at various levels. Caritas Switzerland and the canton of Zurich also offer further training in reading, writing and digital skills in so-called “learning rooms”.
5. Recognize dubious providers online?
On the websites of dubious suppliers of goods, addresses, contact numbers, email addresses and general terms and conditions are generally missing. In addition, their offers are too tempting and too cheap to be true.
6. Recognize phishing emails?
Phishing emails are used to steal personal information and money. Phishing attacks start with an email.
A phishing email can make a tempting offer or demand immediate action, such as filling out a fake form, clicking a link to a fake website, opening an infected attachment, or revealing credit card numbers and passwords. Grammatically deficient texts, unusual salutations or cryptically written sender addresses should make you suspicious.