ad info

 
CNN.com  technology > computing
    Editions | myCNN | Video | Audio | Headline News Brief | Feedback  

 

  Search
 
 

 
TECHNOLOGY
TOP STORIES

Consumer group: Online privacy protections fall short

Guide to a wired Super Bowl

Debate opens on making e-commerce law consistent

(MORE)

TOP STORIES

More than 11,000 killed in India quake

Mideast negotiators want to continue talks after Israeli elections

(MORE)

MARKETS
4:30pm ET, 4/16
144.70
8257.60
3.71
1394.72
10.90
879.91
 


WORLD

U.S.

POLITICS

LAW

ENTERTAINMENT

HEALTH

TRAVEL

FOOD

ARTS & STYLE



(MORE HEADLINES)
*
 
CNN Websites
Networks image


Analysis: Do world's poorest need technology?

IDG.net

(IDG) -- Internet access for the world's poor looks light years away considering that hundreds of millions of people globally lack roads and electricity, much less telephones, according to speakers at the eDevelopment conference Thursday at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT).

As many questions as answers came out of the conference, sponsored by MIT's Media Laboratory, the Center for International Development at Harvard University and the Berkman Center for Internet & Society at Harvard Law School. Speakers discussed the rewards and pitfalls of bringing information technology to marginalized communities.

"Since the last year, the words 'digital divide' have become quite thrown around just about everywhere," said Akhtar Badshah, executive director of Digital Partners Institute, a nonprofit organization working to help poor people through technology. "I mean, just about everyone is on the bandwagon for the digital divide."

Industry leaders, including some who attended the MIT conference, met earlier in the week in Seattle for the Digital Dividends conference, covering much the same ground as the event here. According to the Web site of the World Research Institute, which sponsored the Seattle conference, about 80 percent of the world's population lives on $5 a day or less and has never made a phone call, let alone used the Internet.

MORE COMPUTING INTELLIGENCE
IDG.net   IDG.net home page
  Download free software from PCWorld.com
  ITWorld.com: The IT Problem-Solving Network
  TechInformer: The Thinking Internaut's Guide to the Tech Industry
  E-BusinessWorld
  Reviews & in-depth info at IDG.net
  Global digital divide persists
  Bringing IT to the have-nots
  Questions about computers? Let IDG.net's editors help you
  Personal computing news and reviews from IDG.net
  Search IDG.net in 12 languages
  News Radio
  * Fusion audio primers
  * Computerworld Minute

Both conferences focused on using technology like computers, mobile phones and PDAs (personal digital assistants) to help poor people worldwide. How the digital economy can empower the world's poor, for instance, was the subject of a panel discussion at the MIT conference.

"One of the things that became very clear ... was that there would be a number of different parallel strategies that would be unleashed to address this issue," Badshah said. Right at the center are "those that are trying to create this technology and those that are in the center of profiting from or utilizing this technology. And they're both entrepreneurs. One (group) are IT entrepreneurs and the other are social entrepreneurs."

Strategies for dealing with the so-called 'digital divide' were outlined by spokespeople from groups as diverse as Geekcorps, a nonprofit organization that sends IT specialists to developing nations and various agencies such as the United Nations and the World Bank.

"In terms of empowering the poor with digital technologies, what you need to do is take a segmented approach," said Toyin omo Adelakum, a spokesman from Afrodigital, a new ISP (Internet service provider) in Africa. Adelakum's company primarily serves businesses.

"There are three different levels of exposure you can give, and what people need to do is to target which segment of that economy that they're willing to address -- the businesses, the techies, or the ordinary consumers," he said.

The latest stock quote from Wall Street is not valuable to a fisherman off the coast of India, who needs weather reports from global weather tracking satellites and the prices of tuna in port cities where he sells his catch, Badshah said.

"Is a child going to log on and visit a pornographic site? Is that useful? Or is he going to log on and come into MIT's library? Is that useful? Or is he going to log on and get some information that is useful for them," he said.

"We get so caught up in our enthusiasm about what new things are possible now, that we often don't stop to ask what are the things that these poor communities most need, and what tools would most effectively provide them with the information they need," said Kerry McNamara from the World Bank. "It's simply not interesting to wire the world so everyone can get the Disney Channel."

Holding a laptop computer over his head, a conference attendee asked what good computer access will do for a village with no electricity. "This needs electricity ... and once you bring electricity, we might want to ask, what is the point of bringing this if they're dying of water pollution or starving to death?"




RELATED STORIES:
Conference features technology for Third World countries
October 23, 2000
Report: Digital divide still widening
October 18, 2000
'Digital divide' could create a new class of underprivileged
October 12, 2000
Geekcorps on mission to wire the developing world
September 19, 2000
Analysis: Will the Web save East Timor?
September 7, 2000

RELATED IDG.net STORIES:
Asian, European leaders plan Digital Divide summit
(IDG.net)
Report: Digital Divide widens
(The Industry Standard)
Volunteer brings computers to the Bedouin
(Computerworld)
Rural folks close digital divide, report shows
(IDG.net)
As Net resources grow, so will digital divide
(PC World)
Education called key to bridging digital divide
(Computerworld)
Cameroon Net users surge
(IDG.net)
Study: Low-income households still largely unwired
(IDG.net)

RELATED SITES:
MIT's Media Lab

Note: Pages will open in a new browser window
External sites are not endorsed by CNN Interactive.

 Search   

Back to the top   © 2001 Cable News Network. All Rights Reserved.
Terms under which this service is provided to you.
Read our privacy guidelines.