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Internet Access a Human Right, Says The United Nations

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A United Nations report said that disconnecting people from the internet is a human rights violation and against international law.

 

The report railed against France and the United Kingdom, which have passed laws to remove accused copyright scofflaws from the internet. It also protested blocking internet access to quell political unrest (.pdf).

 

While blocking and filtering measures deny users access to specific content on the Internet, states have also taken measures to cut off access to the Internet entirely. The Special Rapporteur considers cutting off users from internet access, regardless of the justification provided, including on the grounds of violating intellectual property rights law, to be disproportionate and thus a violation of article 19, paragraph 3, of the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

 

The Special Rapporteur calls upon all states to ensure that Internet access is maintained at all times, including during times of political unrest. In particular, the Special Rapporteur urges States to repeal or amend existing intellectual copyright laws which permit users to be disconnected from Internet access, and to refrain from adopting such laws.

 

The report summary has contained in part:

 

Chapter III of the report underlines the applicability of international human rights norms and standards on the right to freedom of opinion and expression to the Internet as a communication
medium, and sets out the exceptional circumstances under which the dissemination of
certain types of information may be restricted.

 

Cisco Kenya Expo 2011 – 28/29 June at the Kenyatta International Conference Center

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Kenya Ministry of Information and Communications and Cisco will host  Cisco Kenya Expo 2011, and is scheduled for 28th to the 29th of June at the Kenyatta International Conference Center. This premier education event for IT, networking and communications professionals is being held for the first time in Nairobi, Kenya.

 

The theme of this conference is  “Collaboration and Virtualization beyond Borders”.

 

A statement from Cisco read in full:

 

Hello & Welcome,

It is my pleasure to invite you to the Cisco Expo Kenya Conference to be held from the 28th – 29th June 2011 at the Kenyatta International Conference Center Nairobi, Kenya.

 

Cisco Expo is the premier IT conference dedicated to networking and communications technology in Kenya. Taking place over two days, the conference offers participants a unique platform to further their knowledge and skills through a comprehensive program that addresses strategic and also technical concerns of companies and institutions.

 

This year our theme is collaboration and virtualization beyond borders.

 

Today’s business environment consists of a complex network of customers, colleagues and partners. We believe that companies that use collaborative processes and tools to enable their employees, customers and partners, to communicate anytime, from any location with any device, are able to improve the speed and efficiency of its operations.

 

Cisco Expo Conference 2011 will bring together our existing and potential customers and partners, representatives of state and local authorities and representatives of major players in ICT and other parts of the economy.

 

We look forward to seeing you in Nairobi at the  Cisco Expo Kenya 2011!

 

Shahab Meshki
General Manager
Cisco Kenya

African Indigenous Technology and Its Broken Succession

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Aham lives in Atu, a village in Osimiri in Nigeria. Atu is peaceful with energy of a typical African tropical climate. Boys and girls enjoy life in this agrarian society. Bird hunting was part of fun.

 

But one day, Aham and his friend, Uche, had gone for bird hunting in a forest few miles away from the village square. While in the forest, Uche was bitten by a very poisonous snake, avuala, and in the mayhem that followed, Aham ran away. While running, he fell down and broke his arms.

 

Luckily, Nkwo, the palm wine tapper was on duty that moment. Right on his tree, he saw what happened and quickly made it straight to where the boys were crying in pains and agonies. Within few minutes, the boys had been taken to the local herbal doctors: one to the local ‘orthopedic surgeon’, the other to a master specialist on snake poison. Both survived. That was eighty years ago.

 

Today, western education has brought many promises. It has opened opportunities for boys and girls to dream big. And become great not just in villages but anywhere.

 

Parents send their kids to schools because schools make them great. However, western education has facilitated a broken succession across villages in Africa. A generation of indigenous knowledge acquired, refined and transferred for more than ten generations are endangered.

 

That creates a problem in some villages because the rate at which development from western education is coming is slower than the rate the indigenous are losing grasp of their own technology.

 

When one orthopedic hospital serves a region comprising of many states with underpaid doctors and experts, few get quality solutions. The other alternative which their parents had depended upon has been destroyed because the skilled people have died or dying.

 

The children of the ‘experts’ have migrated to the urban areas and no one knows the herbs or the processes which can help people in need overcome their challenges.

 

It is a double tragedy! You have lost what you have in the promise of new things which have refused to materialize. That is the challenge, not just in Africa, but in many developing countries where modern technology has not diffused to fill the vacuum created by a broken indigenous technology succession.

 

The question that must be asked is this? Why can’t the government identify these people and develop a process to document what they do in order to preserve knowledge.

 

Better, can the government support them to transition to the new level and use the new (educated) generation to innovate on those trades? We want all children to go to school, but we also want a process that understands that in many rural Africa, we have got technology that must be preserved.

 

A process that does this is very important in Africa. Film them, send them government paid interns, pay them to talk and find ways to conserve that knowledge.

 

Anyhow, we need to preserve what has evolved over generations of Africans. Now is the time to harvest them and put some intellectual property rights which can help them become great.

 

Yes, Africa can be made big from within and our indigenous technology must be strengthened. This calls for African Union/NEPAD to identify this trend as a problem and vigorously tackle it. It must develop a process to curtail the loss of these essential technologies while strengthening a system that will modernize them.

African Engineering Students to Receive Mentoring from IEEE Boston GOLD Members

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IEEE Boston GOLD African Students MentorNet 

African Engineering Students to Receive Mentoring from IEEE Boston GOLD

 

[Also available on IEEE Boston GOLD website]

 

Members of IEEE Boston GOLD are very excited to announce a mentoring program it has developed to assist engineering students in Africa working on their undergraduate senior (final year) projects. This project is poised to help the students access a pool of experienced professionals who are practicing at the cutting edge of science and technology. The mentors will guide the students, providing important directions as they work with their local universities or polytechnics on their projects. Only projects that involve electrical, electronics, computer engineering and related fields will be supported.


This service is completely free. We emphasize that the goal is to help the students develop skills with directions on how to approach some engineering problems. Members of GOLD will not be solving their problems for them. The support could range from helping to design a circuit to developing a test strategy.


Interested students are asked to send a two page free application, describing their projects and what they will need from us. Upon receipt and approval, the project will be assigned to one of our members whose skills and interests align with the students projects. Through email and video communication, the mentor and the student will work together as the former helps to direct the latter.


This program will be administered by the African Institution of Technology and technically driven by the IEEE. It will run as a pilot project from August 2010 to August 2011 and will be continued, if necessary.
To submit a project, kindly send the application to ieee@afrit.org.

 


About IEEE: IEEE is the world’s largest professional association dedicated to advancing technological innovation and excellence for the benefit of humanity. IEEE and its members inspire a global community through IEEE’s highly cited publications, conferences, technology standards, and professional and educational activities.


About African Institution of Technology (AFRIT): AFRIT is a technology focused non-profit organization with the aim of facilitating emerging technology diffusion in Africa. It has organized more than 35 engineering workshops and seminars in the continent.


Infosys Targets Mysis for Acquisition As US Growth Stalls

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We reported earlier that many Indian companies are looking for growth opportunities outside US. This has so far resulted in the rumored interest of Infosys in the soon-to-be-sold Mysis. Amidst the current bout of speculations regarding a possible takeover bid for Misys plc, Jefferies & Co. revisited its long-held view that it is now in the final phase of the value realisation project that Mike Lawrie and ValueAct Capital embarked upon four years ago.

 

“We think the remaining two divisions are likely to be sold. We see upside of at least 20 percent from current levels and reiterate our ‘Buy’ rating,” said Milan Radia, an analyst at Jefferies.

 

Radia said Misys has fully separated its core banking and capital markets divisions, perhaps indicating its willingness to sell these divisions separately. In the absence of a full bid, Misys will, in the analyst’s view, seek to sell core banking first.

 

The Indian vendors, Infosys Technologies Limited are obvious candidates, in Radia’s view, given their strength in banking software. This assumption is based on the information emanating from Infosys indicating that they are on the lookout for acquisitions with a cash chest of more than $3.7 billion, and has an appetite to acquire companies that could go close to a billion US dollars, its CEO-designate SD Shibulal said.

 

“We can easily absorb acquisitions that are around 10% of our total revenue base of $6 billion, but if need be we are ready for bigger acquisitions as well,” the co-founder who is due to be elevated from the chief operating officer’s position,” said in an interview recently.

 

He said the company, which is mainly looking at building competencies through buyouts, was eyeing a deal size of between $300 million and $900 million. “As and when the opportunity (for acquisition) comes the cash available with us would come handy.”The Bangalore-based giant has so far been conservative in buyouts while its cash chest has been growing since last year.