[governance] IGF review
McTim
dogwallah at gmail.com
Sun May 24 16:09:39 EDT 2009
On 5/24/09, Michael Gurstein <gurstein at gmail.com> wrote:
>
> Milton,
>
> There is in many (most?) cases no direct (and arguably little or no
> indirect) connection between the "most developed infrastructure" or "the
> strongest content industries" and "development"--certainly among the poorest
> and the least developed populations...
>
> There are in many cases statistical associations because infrastructure and
> content industries support economic and social advance among the alteady
> developed sections of those societies, but the reality is very different on
> the ground as can be seen quite directly for example in India where highly
> sophisticated inftrastructure/content development has had little or no
> impact on the bulk of the rural population.
>
> I'm now somewhat familiar with the situation for example in South Africa
> where further liberalization whether of infrastructure or of content is
> likely in fact to be an impediment to development by restricting the
> opportunities for public sector intervention precisely to support
> development among the 85% of the population which is currently not
> effectively engaged with/enabled by the quite advanced infrastructure and
> content industries in that country.
>
> Whether the State or not for profits would or could do any better is not
> something I want to argue in this context, but at least as I see the SA
> situation for example, further liberalization (i.e. more competition) will
> lead to a reduction in cost for the already connected and have virtually no
> effect on the not connected.
hmm, this project (in SA, but supported by a variety of folk
worldwide) might prove you wrong.
http://www.villagetelco.org/2009/05/first-phone-call-on-mp-architecture/
and an early implementation of it:
http://www.shuttleworthfoundation.org/our-work/blogs/yabba-dabba-do
and Telkom complained to the regulator that Dabba was "interfering"
with their service and had ICASA confiscate their kit.
I for one would applaud "restricting the opportunities for public
sector intervention", if by public sector you mean Telkom SA!
My original point in this thread was that African CS can actually DO
something instead of just talking about doing something (at the IGF).
--
Cheers,
McTim
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