Presentation held by Mr.Goran Mitreski as a part of the Digital Divide Session at the 8th SEEITA and 7th MASIT Open Days Conference, 14th-15th October, 2010
1. DIGITAL DIVIDE
Impact of Globalization on Digital
Divide
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
2. DEFINITION
• Digital Divide refers to the gap between people with
effective access to digital and information technology
and those with very limited or no access at all.
(Wikipedia – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_divide)
• Globalization describes the process by which
regional economies, societies, and cultures have
become integrated through a global network of
communication, transportation, and trade.
(Wikipedia – http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Globalization)
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
3. W5?
• WHAT it really is?
Uneven pace of progress in access and a devastating lack of awareness vis-à-
vis ICT for many of the developing countries in comparison to those developed
ones.
• WHERE it takes place?
Between countries – Global Digital Divide
Between different groups within the country – Domestic Digital Divide
• WHY?
Primary reason behind the digital divide is poverty, but a digital gap also exists
along gender and ethnic lines as well.
• WHO “pays” the price?
Usually those “not well informed”.
• WHEN?
Now!
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
4. WILL IT SHRINK IN 2010?
• The term digital divide was not even present in our lexicon just two
decades ago, but with the popularity of the Internet and the influx of
technology, the term has become omnipotent in today's jargon.
Source: Kareem Simpson, The Digital Divide: Will it Shrink in 2010? – Associated Content
• In New York City, a whopping 98% of residents have cable service available
to them. Yet only about 46% of the city's households subscribe to the
broadband Internet that cable can provide. The cost of being hooked up to
broadband simply is too high for many low-income New York residents. A
2006 American Community Survey indicated that in New York City, a mere
26% of low-income households had the high speed service at home,
compared to the 54% of moderate-to-high income households --
indication of a very clear "digital divide."
Source: Technology by Ethan Taylor - Gotham Gazette
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
5. 8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
6. “TWO LAW” PREDICTIONS
• Moore’s Law
Doubling of computing power every 18–24 months
• Gilder’s Law
Doubling of communications power every 6 months
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
7. MOORE’S LAW IN PRACTICE
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
8. GILDER’S LAW IN PRACTICE
• In 2001 more information can be sent over a single cable in a
second than in 1997 was sent over the entire internet in a
month.
• The cost of transmitting a trillion bits of information from
“coast –to-coast” has fallen from $150.000 in 1970 to cca 5
cents today.
• 3 min phone call from New York to London that in 1930 cost
more than $300 (in today’s prices) costs less than 10 cents
nowadays.
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
9. KEY AREAS FOR POLICY FOCUS
e-Health
e-Learning
e-Business
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
10. e-Business
• e-Business rather than trade-oriented e-Commerce
e-Business goes far beyond e-Commerce or buying and selling over the
Internet, and deep into the processes and cultures of an enterprise.
• Communications and Transport Services are considered to be
the National Backbone Services which determine to a
significant extent the trade competitiveness of the country’s
businesses.
logistics, real-time tracking systems, just-in-time production and
delivery, knowledge management, as well as intelligent transport
systems
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
11. e-Learning
• Access to knowledge is essential for development.
While the formal education system per se provides access to knowledge, its
reach has been limited in disadvantaged parts of many developing countries,
owing to economic and human resource constraints and other factors.
Interactive distance learning and service networks seem to be promising tools
in ensuring both cost-effectiveness and the minimum human resource
requirements for knowledge-sharing.
• The challenge for Governments is to find the most cost-
effective and efficient ways of bridging the corresponding
knowledge gaps in the countries and to optimally leverage the
resources and skills available in the more developed areas of
the country in order to help the other areas to catch up.
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
12. e-Health
• Live consultations between ambulance or remote clinic and
medical centres of excellence
Real-time communication, plus file transfers of data, including diagnostic
imagery, to facilitate teleconferencing on diagnosis and treatment.
• Major objective is to narrow the gap between rural and urban
medical services
• Excellent opportunity for establishing PPP (Public Private
Partnership)
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
13. NOTE
• Even as the developing countries try to bridge the emerging
digital divide and overcome the negatives of globalization by
seizing the emerging ICT opportunities to provide their
population with universal education and improved skills, they
require cooperation, assistance and support from the
international community, including the private sector, to
enable them compete and grow in a networked and
globalized world.
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org
14. SUMMARY
• ICT is one of the driving forces of globalization and provides
developing countries with opportunities for rapid
development.
• Unfortunately, access to information, communication and
technology is not evenly distributed between communities
and among regions/countries world-wide.
• To bridge the Digital Divide, appropriate policies, capacity-
building and related issues (infrastructure, technology,…)
need to be addressed in a comprehensive manner.
8th SEEITA – 7th SEE ICT Forum Meeting & 7th MASIT Open Days Conference
14-15 October 2010, Ohrid www.seeita.org