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How will broadband affect burgeoning controversies over health care? The answers to this question and more came courtesy of a Broadband Cenus-hosted, hour-long panel discussion. View a video of the discussion. View Now




President Obama on Innovation and Sustainable Growth. President Barack Obama has new plans to strengthen the economy that will all favor people with hi-tech educations.
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Elevate Miami, a comprehensive Digital Inclusion program launched by the city of Miami, aims to serve youth, low-income families, minorities, seniors and residents facing barriers to digital inclusion.
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The Knight Center of Digital Excellence held its first Stimulus Webcast Session for Knight communities and program directors July 23. Watch it online now.
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By pushing hard on broadband, lawmakers hope to close the "digital divide" that has long separated rural America. In doing so, they hope to give rural consumers access to the same sorts of high-speed services and opportunities - think telemedicine, distance-learning and Web-based commerce - that city dwellers have enjoyed for years.
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Posts Tagged ‘Europe’

Net neutrality across the globe

Tuesday, October 20th, 2009

Ever since Federal Communications Commission (FCC) Chairman Julius Genachowski’s Sept. 21 net neutrality webcast at the Brookings Institute, an intense debate on the subject has raged between a number of industry executives, policy makers and other concerned parties.

What everyone seems to agree on, however, is the impression the FCC made by publicly stating its stance. Stephen Collins, head of global regulatory affairs for Skype, one of the loudest voices for net neutrality from within the high-tech industry, said, “This puts the FCC at the forefront of global Internet policy. It was a bold statement that could have ripple effects across the globe.”

It’s difficult to imagine what the exact effect would be across the globe if the U.S. were to implement and enforce a robust net neutrality policy. Other nations have different needs, different broadband infrastructures and considerably diverse government models.

A few nations, such as Norway and Japan, have net neutrality rules in place similar to those proposed by Genachowski. Others have dismissed such policies, including several European nations and emerging nations, because telecommunications companies are either controlled by or closely connected to the government. The government plays an even larger role in nations such as China, Iran and Ethiopia, where content and connection speeds are so heavily censored and restricted that there may as well be no Internet service at all.

However, a large number don’t even have a need to consider policies at all because consumers already enjoy both a greater level of competition and more bandwidth than in the U.S.

Those are important categories to consider – competition and infrastructure. When you strip down many of the arguments made for or against FCC-proposed net neutrality rules, those seem to be two concerns that are most prevalent in the overall debate. Read the Knight Center of Digital Excellence’s four-part series on the FCC’s six net neutrality rules for specific examples on how the relative lack of broadband competition and low levels of available bandwidth in our nation are pitting major industry players against each other.

Looking at nations that considered competition and infrastructure issues from the onset adds an interesting facet to the net neutrality debate: Is it a short-term solution to answer for a lack of long-term planning?

Net neutrality is important, and rules governing it should apply to the Internet no matter where or how it’s accessed to ensure American consumers have fast, open and accessible service. At the same time, we hope they don’t detract attention from big-picture problems – the need for more robust competition in broadband markets and the building of higher speed, best-effort infrastructure.

A positive revolution in Africa – and it’s all about connectivity

Wednesday, September 16th, 2009

In recent weeks, the world press has reported on the potential revolutionary impact of a $650 million broadband project connecting East and Southern Africa to India and Europe.  The aim is to spur the African economy, especially through technology innovation.

The fiber-optic cable that just went live is the first of several new undersea connections expected to boost Internet access in Africa between now and mid-2010.  The cable is being built by a consortium, controlled primarily by African investors, with expansion costs estimated at $2.4 billion.  The expanded Internet service will include Asia and parts of the Middle East.

Imagine the impact on the African continent, where some of the world’s most abject poverty exists. 

Jon Gosier, a tech blogger, predicts that East Africa could become an outsourcing hub.  “I think you’ll see a wave of creativity and new business opportunities as more and more Africans come online by the millions,” wrote Gosier, founder of a Uganda-based software development firm.  “I think in five years or so we’ll be where places like India and Singapore are now.”

However, currently Africa is lagging behind. 

In March, the International Telecommunication Union released its latest index comparing developments in “information and communication technologies” (ICT levels) in 154 countries over a five-year period from 2002 to 2007. 

Many of the poorer, African countries hardly improved their already low broadband penetration rates over that five-year span.  Prior to this new broadband project, only about five percent of the population in some areas used the Internet.

If the excitement is as unabashed as media reports say, it’s because of what Gosier anticipates:  Major change, resulting in money in people’s pockets. 

It’s not just blog talk.  In its report, the Telecommunication Union, too, noted the “close relationship” between ICT levels and GDP.  And in June, a World Bank report also noted the correlation between high-speed Internet access and economic growth – pointing to findings that for every 10 percentage points of increase in high-speed access, there is a 1.3 percentage point increase in economic growth.

In Africa, there will many ways to measure growth – such as in the number of children fed, or the number of textbooks in schools, or in medicines dispensed. 

To be sure, the work ahead is enormous.  While main Internet highways are being built, there will still be challenges reaching isolated areas. 

But now there’s a great start. In a part of the world that has suffered so much, it is time for a revolution in the most positive sense. 

On track in Lexington

Monday, March 16th, 2009

For the first time ever, the World Equestrian Games will be held outside Europe, with Lexington, Ky., as host, in 2010. As Lexington prepares for this world stage, the city will be drawing on an expanded broadband network to keep event-goers in touch with up-to-the-minute happenings at the races – not just from the stands, but via the Internet from shops, restaurants, hotels and elsewhere downtown.

The games will demonstrate how a world-class sporting event can benefit from world-class technology, made possible in part through support from the Knight Center of Digital Excellence.

For example, advanced, high-speed communications will mean tighter security, greater ease in ticketing and even in finding the right bus from one point to another at the event. New technologies will also notch up operations in the press box and in keeping race statistics.

And when the World Equestrian Games are over?

Lexington will enjoy lasting benefits. Its leaders envision applications in areas such as healthcare, education and equestrian pursuits.

Watch this space for updates on Lexington and other Knight communities around the U.S.