Netizens-Digest Thursday, October 21 1999 Volume 01 : Number 343 Netizens Association Discussion List Digest In this issue: [netz] kmm070: What the net is good for [netz] Information Rich - Information Poor, Bridging the digital divide (UK) ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 14 Oct 1999 16:23:04 -04 From: kerryo@ns.sympatico.ca (Kerry Miller) Subject: [netz] kmm070: What the net is good for Taylor and Licklider (1968), "The Computer as a Communications Device." An early vision of computers as communications devices, not just number-crunching machines. (http://memex.org/licklider.pdf ) "It may be rather arrogant and presumptuous of me to assume that my thoughts have brought joy to those who have been following this column. Nevertheless , I would like to imagine that my scribbling has brought an element of hope to at least one person out there , has made at least one soul feel less lonely and more understood in the confusion of this world." - Nilufer, 1999, in a near-vacuum at http://www.internetindia.com/culture/impress1.html ============ 1. As the Internet wave sloshes over the tablelands of culture, one tries to come to terms with its fundamental characteristic, the exposure of ambiguity in practically everything. One clings to any terms that comes along, in fact, clambering on in hopes of drawing a breath of more familiar air. (Make-money-fast was one of the first bits of flotsam, but equal-access, information-divide and invasion-of- privacy have shown up in turn, and we're hardly through the breakers yet.) But as each apparently solid spar fribbles away to dust (or rather mud), the councillors of the global village are slotting it in for destruction by IPv6 in order to save it. Seeing that the fastest money is being made among fast women, access to court records has been equalizing with a vengeance, and what was thought to be privacy turning out to be only a lack of attention, a home truth is being embarrasingly revealed: the lowest common denominator is undiscriminatingly equal in its loathsome lowness and its commonplace vulgarity -- and *we don't like it.* We want standards (that is, fences) and our rights (that is, privileges). We want to be able to say 'we' without including you. We want to keep some criteria decently concealed: make the world safe for democracy, for sure, but who the _deimos_ is is not in question. So where does the dove of peace find land? Where can she drop the twig that may grow a shrub to yield a beam to support our cultural freight? There is only one way to map the answer: strip away the baggage, jettison the ormulu clocks and solid silverware that make up so much of it, and get down to the nita-Gita of it all. Where that essential drop lands is where the sheaves will become full. I dont mean the 6 videos you would want to have on a desert island holiday, or the shaving mug that was your grandfather's, or any kerchief of 'decency.' I mean the capsule (literally, little head, like the apple in your eye), the hard core, the cyst from which the spores of community (the kinder face of commonality) are to be propagated, cultivated, enculturated. Well, look around: what do propaganda, cults and well-hung 'high' culture share ('have in common')? Isnt it their use of symbols, markers, cornerstones, hallmarks, hexagrams, chicken scratches -- in short, language? Anything that is not just itself, but stands for and represents ('makes known') something else, is fair game for the cultural- survival gene. All is lang-syne grist for the millwheel of language, whim-meal for the 40 or so theses and thats which will duly fruit and be saluted as 'characteristics' of one hotchpotch or pot-au-feu, calamari or Kalamanja or another, which will then be tied together, summed up, packaged and made known to the 'world' as The Culture of &H. (It must be so, for any overt discriminant by which one thing is selected over another is already a cultural accretion and therefore must be abandoned. Language, in contrast, relies on what is left *unsaid, on the boundary which is clear to everyone who understands ('us') -- which is between, if we have to say it in so many words, what *is and what *is not*. 2. Now, before you rush off following your several mad directions regarding the difference between what is (so) and what is (said), can we twist the *function of language (its flowers of speech and its - -- our -- acculturated fruit) to look at the capsular or embedded *form of language? What boundaries might be *represented if we pretend to actually say something about what is not? In particular, what is this Net which so neatly and mechanically simulates the business of language that we know so well? (What the next generation will know, growing up on this homogenized stuff as a steady diet, is anybody's guess.) a) Writing is not speech. b) A message is not a communcation. c) Backchannel is not on-list, and onlist is not at a website (as Nilufer discovered, after a year of weekly posts). d) One's speech is not protected by a right of privacy; that is, one is now liable for *what (*you,*) the people understand*. I could go on to point out that tests of performance are now _criteria (http://www.theatlantic.com/unbound/interviews/ba990623.htm ), and that the decay of learning (remembering, or making fit; see also http://www.liv.ac.uk/~pbarrett/present.htm ), religion (another kind of fitting or tying together), and of what used to be called *style ('line drawing') have all come together in one generation -- but it wouldn't be nice to rant, would it? Surely there's enough downloaded obscenity (that which is not to be seen) on everyone's desktop already. This is Licklider's legacy, then: a crop of what-nots in place of what's-is. If he missed out on the honours at UCLA's '30th birthday' of the net, he can well be immortalized as the first genetic engineer, so far as the production of viable cultural crops -- humankind's one and only sustainable development -- is concerned. kerry, ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 21 Oct 1999 02:28:58 From: John Walker Subject: [netz] Information Rich - Information Poor, Bridging the digital divide (UK) The CSS Internet News (tm) is a daily e-mail publication that has been providing up to date information to Netizens since 1996. Subscription information is available at: http://www.bestnet.org/~jwalker/inews.htm or send an e-mail to jwalker@bestnet.org with SUBINFO CSSINEWS in the SUBJECT line. The following is an excerpt from the CSS Internet News. If you are going to pass this along to other Netizens please ensure that the complete message is forwarded with all attributes intact. NOTE: Registrations for the On-line Learning Series of Courses for November are now being accepted. Information is available at: http://www.bestnet.org/~jwalker/course.htm - ------------ Information Rich - Information Poor, Bridging the digital divide (UK) Thursday, October 14, 1999 Published at 13:37 GMT 14:37 UK http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/special_report/1999/10/99/information _rich_information_poor/newsid_466000/466651.stm The Internet has ushered in the greatest period of wealth creation in history. It's rocked the way we deliver and receive information and the way we do business. And so, for many, it is easy to accept euphoric claims - like those of Vice President Al Gore - that the Internet is also bringing about a brave new world replete with an "electronic agora" and "online democracy". It's not. More than 80% of people in the world have never even heard a dial tone, let alone surfed the Web. And the gap between the information haves and have-nots is widening. In a speech this week at Telecom 99 in Geneva, Switzerland, UN Secretary General Kofi Anan warned of the danger of excluding the world's poor from the information revolution. "People lack many things: jobs, shelter, food, health care and drinkable water. Today, being cut off from basic telecommunications services is a hardship almost as acute as these other deprivations, and may indeed reduce the chances of finding remedies to them," he said. In this special report, BBC News Online probes the growing gap between the information rich and information poor: How big is it? Why is it so hard to close? And how are individuals and communities around the globe trying to bridge the digital divide? Losing ground bit by bit By BBC News Online's Jane Black The hype for everything online obscures the reality about how technology is changing life at the end of the 20th century. >From Manhattan and Madrid, the Internet has fundamentally changed work, recreation - even love. But in Malawi and Mozambique, life remains very much the same. More than 80% of people in the world have never heard a dial tone, let alone sent an email or downloaded information from the World Wide Web. "Think how powerful the Internet is. Then remind yourself that fewer than 2% of people are actually connected," said Larry Irving, former US assistant secretary of commerce. The power of the Web increases exponentially with every person who goes online. Imagine what we're missing." Facts first First the figures. The statistics on the basic building block of connectedness - that is, phone lives - are stark. According to the latest UN Human Development Report, industrialised countries, with only 15% of the world's population, are home to 88% of all Internet users. Less than 1% of people in South Asia are online even though it is home to one-fifth of the world's population. The situation is even worse in Africa. With 739 million people, there are only 14 million phone lines. That's fewer than in Manhattan or Tokyo. Eighty percent of those lines are in only six countries. There are only 1 million Internet users on the entire continent compared with 10.5 million in the UK. Even if telecommunications systems were in place, most of the world's poor would still be excluded from the information revolution because of illiteracy and a lack of basic computer skills. In Benin, for example, more than 60% of the population is illiterate. The other 40% are similarly out of luck. Four-fifths of Websites are in English, a language understood by only one in 10 people on the planet. Barriers The lack of resources in poor communities can't explain the technology gap alone. In the developing world, there is still resistance to the idea that technology is a quick-fix. Take the African Virtual University. The World Bank-sponsored programme has broadcast over 2000 hours of instruction to over 9000 students in all regions of sub-Saharan Africa. The initiative has allowed AVU students to take courses given by professors from world-renowned educational institutions in Africa, North America, and Europe. That does not impress Ethiopian Meghistab Haile: "With that money just imagine how many lecturers you could have. If the World Bank is really wanting to help African universities then the first step would be to encourage and support the Africans to return back. In the end it is only the Africans who could solve their problems." Others complain that high-tech education - available only to a select elite - is not worth it when so many places on the continent are still without electricity and running water. "Our priorities are hygiene, sanitation, safe drinking water," said Supatra Koirala who works at a private nursing home in Kathmandu. "How is having access to the Internet going to change that?" How to close the gap As the famous Alcoholics Anonymous saying goes: Admitting you have a problem is the first step to recovery. International organisations, governments and private institutions are just starting to do this. When I was first talking about the Internet in the developing world in 1992, I was called a 'technofascist' and a 'cybercolonist'," said Larry Irving. "Now I don't get those comments, just questions about how can we get this - and fast." Magda Escobar, Executive Director of Plugged In, a non-profit working to bring technology resources to poor communities in California, agrees. The convergence of a lot of different interests has put this on the agenda," she said. "The general public is interested in having access to the tech revolution, businesses want to expand their markets, schools are interested in trying to change the way kids are taught. Everyone's awareness is coming together at the same time. Experts like Mr Irving estimate that the Internet will be virtually global in five to seven years. But for that to happen infrastructure must be put in place, which means a lot of money - and fast. The Net may be the wave of the future but age-old problems still apply. Case studies Networking locally The Internet is not yet a reality for Burkina Faso By BBC News Online's Kate Milner If the Internet is supposed to be a tool to open up communication for all and enrich all our lives, what better test than a project involving illiterate farmers in Burkina Faso? Father Maurice Oudet is doing just that. A priest who has lived in Burkina Faso for 30 years, he is using the Internet to gather information and publish a magazine for farmers in some of the country's 71 local dialects. Father Oudet knows well what it is like to be out of touch. When he first arrived in Burkina Faso, he was based in a remote parish with no telephone. The closest post office was 20km (12 miles) away. Today Father Oudet is a little more connected. In Koudougou, a town about 100km (62 miles) from the capital Ouagadougou where he now lives, he has a telephone and Internet access. But he still doesn't buy the Internet hype. The Internet cannot change the lives of the poorest people because it doesn't put food in mouths. Land-locked Burkina Faso is one of the poorest countries in the world. It has few natural resources and a poor soil. Life expectancy at birth is around 45 years. Although around 90% of people live on the land, many families still struggle to eat. The average farmer's income is around a 60p a day and they may live far from towns and telephone lines. This is one of the chronic problems of bringing the Internet to the developing world. The information gap may be getting wider but the world's poorest still don't see it as a priority. But Father Oudet believes it can help in other ways. Besides a chronic shortage of food, Burkina Faso also has a largely illiterate population. Only 19.2% of people speak and read French, the official language. The farmers who can read and write are learning their own dialects. Father Oudet's magazine, published every three months, uses many of the diverse languages of Burkina Faso to help them learn. Agricultural workers can contribute to the magazine, by sending in their views and experiences and passing on farming advice. The magazine is produced using desktop publishing facilities in Koudougou, but the editorial content is gathered from volunteers from each region and language. Outside resources have also proved useful. Websites as far away as Canada provide feature material. The magazine is not yet published online - but the possibility is an appealing one. The online magazine would create a community of farmers, using technology to exchange ideas and information, a world where everyone, rich and poor, can access information with the click of a mouse. There are some encouraging signs. Burkina Faso is one of 13 African countries where local telecom operators have set up a special 'area-code' for Internet access. That means that a call to the Internet only costs as much as a local call even if the Internet Service Provider is far away in a major city. But there is some way to go before the average Burkinabe is truly represented on the Internet. The cost of communication By BBC News Online's Kate Milner Communication has never been easy in Mongolia. The country is nearly three times the size of France but has a population density of 1.5/sq mile, one of the lowest in the world. The Internet seems the natural answer but the problem is less one of infrastructure than the cost of getting online. The price to connect is certainly out of reach for most ordinary people. One ISP charges approximately £30 ($50) per month and that does not include the cost of the phone call. The average GDP per capita is £1,359 ($2,250). That's complicated by the gap between rich and poor. More than one third of the population lives in poverty. Outside the capital Ulaanbaatar, many areas still do not have telephone access. The Asia-Pacific Development Information Programme (APDIP), a United Nations-funded organisation based in Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia, is trying to help. APDIP has launched Citizen Information Service Centers, where citizens in remote Aimags including areas of the Gobi desert, can now connect to the central government, apply for grants on-line, receive news, and obtain basic training in computing. The first step was a summit designed to explore opportunities through IT. APDIP also set up a cyber café in the UNDP building in Ulaanbaatar, to show people what technology has to offer. "We want to involve ordinary people," he said. "If they cannot see the vision then we cannot make it work," said Atsushi Yamanaka who works for the UNDP. "Young people are the ones who have to create this. People are very eager to tap into new technology, but they're not sure of how to best use it. The programme's long-term aim is to encourage businesses and colleges to take up information technology and to build a culture of open information. It has set targets for the next two to three years and is building an action plan up to 2010. But Mr Yamanaka said there were still problems in Mongolia following the end of socialism and the country's first democratic elections in July 1990. "Under socialism there was a train every few days, so people got letters every two days," he said. "Citizens who had everything, all of a sudden they didn't have anything. Now it can take two months for letters to get through. "The people are suffering a lack of information and a lack of basic services." But even as new technology takes hold, those in power in Mongolia still have doubts. Changing people's mindset is the hardest part. "There needs to be a very top-level support." Said Mr Yamanaka. "Email is not seen as an official document. It's not like a paper agreement that you can sign and seal. "The government is keen to use email but they ask, 'What is its status, how official is it?'" Making ends meet in Morocco By BBC News Online's Jane Black "Men eat and sleep," says Fadma Bouadou of Taliounie, Morocco. "Women work." That may never change but Fadma has found a way to beat the system. She still does the work but thanks to the Internet she can now sell her wares in the global marketplace, earning enough money to take care of herself and two daughters. Fadma is part of a group of local weavers who sell their rugs through a site called Virtual Souk. The project, which employs 775 artisans in Morocco, Tunisia and Lebanon, works through non-governmental organisations to get rid of the middleman and deliver 65-80% of money earned to the artisans themselves. Around 75 to 80% of the artisans partners of the Virtual Souk are women. "Taliounie was our first project and we chose it because it is remote and isolated village. We wanted to demystify the technology," said Azedine Ouerghi of the World Bank Institute who is managing the project. "If we could do it in Taliounie, we could do it anywhere." The project has thrown a lifeline to the women of Taliounie as each woman involved in the project will testify. Fadma Aoubaida, a mother of seven, earned 532 dirhams (£33) which she spent to repair her roof and start building an indoor latrine, one of the few in her village. Ijja Aittalblhsen spent her last payment to buy cement and windows to renovate her home. When asked what she wanted to do with future profits, Ijja first said she would buy gold jewelry - a traditional way for women to save. Then she got more imaginative. First she suggested buying a truck to transport rugs produced in the village to the town where they are marketed. She now believes that getting all the women bicycles would be more fun because they could have a race on the way home. But the market for indigenous crafts on the Internet is still uncertain. If brand-name Net start-ups - with huge amounts of venture capital behind them - have yet to make money on the Internet, what chance is there for isolated artisans in the developing world? "We thought we could build a cool Website and people would come there and buy things," says Daniel Salcedo, founder of PeopLink, an Internet marketplace for indigenous crafts. But having people find you is hard. Having them trust you is even harder." That is where Virtual Souk is trying to help. All transactions are processed through a clearinghouse in Paris. Artisans are not paid until clients receive the product. Mr Ouerghi of the World Bank says he hopes to expand the project, creating sub-sites for artisans in the Middle East, Asia and Latin America. Either way it's fine for women like Fadma Bouadou. Even in it's early stages, the Internet has opened up her up to the world and helped to make ends meet. Plugging in to the revolution By BBC News Online's Jane Black Think of Silicon Valley and you think of the information revolution. Technology has created hundreds of young millionaires in the Valley and brought an epic boom to the rest of the United States. But such riches have not reached everyone. In East Palo Alto, the area bordering the tech-rich Stanford University campus and the corporate HQs of multi-billion dollar companies such as Yahoo and Oracle, more than 17% of the population lives in poverty. Only 14% have a four-year college degree and less than one out of five families has a computer in the home. Even in America the digital divide is wide. But as technology increasingly becomes a part of everyday life, and the political debate, a new awareness is emerging that the benefits of technology will not filter down by themselves. "It's taken a while for mainstream culture to understand how it would make their lives easier - and what their lives would be like without it," said Magda Escobar, the Executive Director of Plugged In, a community project that aims to bridge the digital divide. "It is also a very sexy issue. And it's politically advantageous for everyone - liberal or conservative - to focus on it." Plugged In is leading by example in East Palo Alto. The non-profit organisation offers residents state-of-the-art computers and courses to build their literacy and computer skills, work on their CVs or make money as Web designers. Plugged In Enterprises, a teen-run Web page design business, is one of the centre's most dynamic and talked about programmes. Each year 36 teenagers learn cutting-edge business skills and earn money working on projects for real clients including Hewlett-Packard and Sun Microsystems. PIE, as it is known, is run by John Mireles, a 17-year-old from nearby San Jose. Formerly a graffiti artist, John's own projects include transferring his own highly-charged images into digital form and pushing the medium to its limits. His goal: to earn a good living that leaves him plenty of time for his own art. Plugged In also runs a programme called Community Kids which hosts 55 children each day after school and involves them in hands-on arts and crafts and computer projects. The Plugged In Community Technology Centre, a mixture of a café, copy shop and library, is a resource for teenagers and adults to work on their CVs or get career advice. But there is still much work to be done. The latest report from the US Commerce Department, Falling Through The Net, reports that the digital divide widened between 1998 and 1999. Black and hispanic households are approximately one-third as likely to have home Internet access as households of Asian/Pacific Islander descent, and roughly two-fifths as likely as white households, according to the report. The disparity does not only follow racial lines. Even at the lowest income levels, those in urban areas are more than twice as likely to have Internet access than those in rural areas. "We need to keep up the pressure to keep up with the technology," says Ms Escobar. "There's a risk that people will just dump equipment into poor areas. This is a long process." Links: http://www.bestnet.org/~jwalker/gkd.htm Includes: Development Report UN Development Programme Info 21 World Bank InfoDev African Development Forum The first mile: Wiring the South and rural areas Plugged In PEOPLink NTIA report: Falling Through the Net CIA World Factbook: Burkina Faso African Virtual University Virutal Souk Information and Communication Technology, Mongolia Asia-Pacific Development Information Programme The United Nations in Mongolia Soros Foundation: Mongolia - ------------------ Also in this issue: - - Information Rich - Information Poor, Bridging the digital divide (UK) The Internet has ushered in the greatest period of wealth creation in history. It's rocked the way we deliver and receive information and the way we do business. - - Melissa Mutates Again; Fix Found (US) Symantec, McAfee both offer inoculation against new, malicious strains of the Melissa mail-sending virus. - - Congressional spam bill due today (US) update The U.S. House of Representatives today will begin consideration of a bill that would create a nationwide list of people who do not want to receive junk email, known in Internet parlance as "spam." - - Encyclopaedia Britannica Goes Online For Free (US) CHICAGO (Reuters) - The entire Encyclopaedia Britannica, a 32-volume set that sells for $1,250 in book form, has been placed on the Internet free of charge, the publishers of the 231-year-old reference work announced Tuesday. - - Plugged In: Like It Or Not, The 'Net Is Everywhere (US) PALO ALTO, Calif. (Reuters) - Scott Arenson, a Seattle-based marketing consultant has watched the World Wide Web mushroom from a clunky, text-based interface in late 1993 to an unstoppable global force that promises to worm its way into every nook and cranny of our lives. - - XML gives firms a database edge (US) COMPANIES whose databases do not share information either internally or with other businesses would face a "serious competitive disadvantage" in the coming decade, according to a data management expert. - - Experts warn of Internet's weight on economy (Asia) The wildfire growth of the Internet could have unintended and disruptive economic consequences, particularly for financial assets, experts said Tuesday. - - Tech firms urged to unite against computer vandals (US) ARLINGTON, VA. -- The people who make it their business to protect secure computer systems from illicit penetration by outsiders agreed Monday they have something important to learn from the villains: pooling information. - - Not so amazing Amazon (US) Stock market turmoil is shaking the shelves at Amazon.com. The online retailer's stock is down nearly 30% from its 1999 high, stung by rising interest rates and a grumpy Federal Reserve. - - Statistics Canada: 90 Percent of Canadian Schools Are Online The majority of Canadian schools are connected to the Internet for educational purposes, according to a new survey on computer technology in the classrooms. The survey showed that despite major strides taken in introducing computers to schools and connecting them to the Internet, education systems face significant challenges as they move towards taking fuller advantage of the new information age. - - New Lists and Journals * NEW: Canuck-US_spouses * CHANGE: FreeNET * NEW: BEAUTIFUL CHILD DIARY On-line Learning Series of Courses http://www.bestnet.org/~jwalker/course.htm Member: Association for International Business - ------------------------------- Excerpt from CSS Internet News (tm) ,-~~-.____ For subscription details email / | ' \ jwalker@hwcn.org with ( ) 0 SUBINFO CSSINEWS in the \_/-, ,----' subject line. ==== // / \-'~; /~~~(O) "On the Internet no one / __/~| / | knows you're a dog" =( _____| (_________| http://www.bestnet.org/~jwalker - ------------------------------- ------------------------------ End of Netizens-Digest V1 #343 ******************************