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Improving internet access in Africa

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“The next billion” is a phrase often heard in the internet industry. It refers to the next group of people who will gain internet access and begin to take advantage of the opportunities offered by the online world.

Globally, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) estimates that 47% of people are using the internet in 2016. There is a stark difference between the developed world, where 81% of people are using the internet, and the developing world, where the figure falls to 40.1%.

The wide variation between countries in terms of internet presence is demonstrated in Nominet’s ‘Map of the Online World’. According to this map, which resizes countries based on to the number of country-code domain names registered, the entire continent of Africa could fit into the UK several times.

ITU data tells us that only 25.1% of people in Africa use the internet. In the countries categorised by the United Nations as ‘least developed’, the proportion of people using the internet is only 15.2%. Thirty-four of the 48 Least Developed Countries are in Africa.

Whichever way you look at it, most of Africa — unfortunately — is on the wrong side of the digital divide.

This is not due to a lack of interest among those living there. As the incredible growth in mobile phone ownership demonstrates, if a technology is useful, affordable and accessible, it will be adopted at pace. By way of example: between 2002 and 2014 the proportion of people with a mobile phone went from 8% to 83% in Ghana, 9% to 82% in Kenya, and 10% to 73% in Tanzania.

According to a 2014 McKinsey & Company report, barriers to internet adoption span four key categories: incentives, low incomes and affordability, user capability, and infrastructure.

The infrastructure required for traditional broadband — digging trenches and laying cables — often isn’t viable. The costs of delivering connectivity can greatly outweigh the profits that can be made in many environments.

But new technology does offer hope.

One of the most promising is the use of TV white space to power low-cost, reliable wireless broadband. ‘TV white space’ refers to unused gaps in the radio spectrum, within the range traditionally used to broadcast television. As recently reported by the BBC, Nominet is using this technology to deliver broadband to remote parts of Scotland, in the first commercial rollout of its kind in Europe.

Another organisation backing TV white space in a big way is Microsoft, and we’re very pleased to be partnering with them to bring broadband to communities across Africa.

As part of its Affordable Access Initiative, Microsoft is using TV white space to provide internet access in some of the most remote parts of the world. One of many examples is this solar-powered internet cafe housed in a bright yellow shipping container in rural Kenya.

Nominet’s chief contribution will be our expertise in Dynamic Spectrum Management. Because the available set of TV white space frequencies varies, we’ve developed a database to perform complex calculations that tell devices what frequencies they can use in a given area, at what power, and for how long. This dynamic allocation of available space is far more efficient than any existing static technique. And ultimately, the more efficiently the radio spectrum is shared, the more devices — and users — can get connected.

Access to the internet is a key enabler of economic growth and social change. In the UK, Nominet has managed a critical part of national internet infrastructure — the .uk domain — for 20 years. We’ve seen firsthand the positive impacts of the internet across diverse parts of our society, from students to small business owners to new mothers.

We think it’s important to share these opportunities at a global level by bringing connectivity to communities in the developing world. We’re not alone in this. It’s something that’s being worked toward by the United Nations, by some leading international companies, and most importantly, by many people in these communities themselves.

According to Benson Maina, the man who runs the Kenyan internet cafe mentioned above, “Bringing the internet connection to the community… People never knew the possibilities, but now they have the whole world in their hands.”

At Nominet, we’re delighted to play our part in welcoming the next billion online.

The post Improving internet access in Africa appeared first on Nominet.

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More profits for those fat executive bonuses and bloated directors' emoluments. Being a mouthpiece for the corporate PR machine has never been so rewarding! Nominet salaries are about the only thing rising faster than average house prices.

But thank goodness they slapped those pesky registrants with a 50% price rise, eh? Otherwise the gravy ocean would only be a gravy lake.
 
[QUOTE="Edwin, post: 559501, member: 236"a 50% price rise, eh?

An increase of £1.25 per year, per domain name, when compared with the former two year rate, right? For everything, £0.25 per year, right?[/QUOTE]

Why are we revisiting something both you and I know backwards and forwards? This fake naivete is not a substitute for reality. It was proven that the overwhelming majority of registrations were for two years so the "lower" 1-year price rise is a trojan horse.

Post-truth may have been word of the year, but that's not a license to shy away from facts (which, unlike opinions, only come in one flavour: correct)
 
I'm not a big registrar but have signed up for a promotion in December. Ask @Edwin if he has. Maybe you're just playing at being a Nominet registrar @martin-s and have nothing to register or renew?

I did investigate it, but the promotions we have access to were a bit pointless for us. Not that I'm allowed to talk about it without breaking the NDA, but they only gave savings for registrations which were longer than we consider worthwhile for either ourselves or customers. And even those savings were fairly pitiful.

You're absolutely right that we're not a high volume registrar - fewer than 400 names from memory.

Note, my comments about Nominet are very rarely based on self interest. Generally they are focused on what I believe would be best for registrants in the .uk namespace.
 
I realise you wish to paint it as a 50% price rise without providing the financials but are my figures (i.e. it being a £1.25 increase per year per domain name when based on the former two year rate) inaccurate?

Allow me to feed the troll...

The price rise (for default two year registrations) is up £2.50 from £5 to £7.50 + VAT. Most bigger registrars have (for the time being at least) used it as an excuse to raise prices further than that to increase margins.

That's despite the extra kick backs they get now of course.

And assuming .uk isn't completely dead by 2019, the price rise for all business registrants doubles again at that point because of the need to protect their .uk as well.

From £5 for two years to £15 for two years. With all evidence thus far pointing towards a war chest for crazy salaries and whim projects. And zero benefit to registrants.
 
So isn't that an increase of £1.25 per year per domain name based on the original two year rate? :)

Yes. 50%, like Edwin said.

Assuming your registrar didn't raise retail prices beyond the increase the registry introduced, why aren't registrants transferring their domain names over to you (and others that didn't) in droves?

We don't accept registrations from the public. And we absorbed the whole of the price increase.

You're presuming they all feel they will need to and also presuming there won't be some sort of bundling offered, for example.

Actually, I'm assuming .uk will be dead in the water. But if it isn't, the risks associated with not owning the equivalent .uk are too great. So any well-run business will have to have it.
 
Never been a non-profit. Membership voted to expand the articles and remit for business Nominet could engage in back in November 2006.

There should have been more foresight - and now corrective action is needed.
 
Might be an opportunity there for you if you decided to or are you not so sure registrants would flock to you in droves despite the retail registrars price increases?

It's not a business model I have any interest in whatsoever.
 

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