Financial Times
Africa races to fill telecoms ‘not spots’
The economics of rolling out connections to the most rural parts of Africa presents a hefty challenge for the hopes of many in the telemedicine world. Data compiled by M-Lab, an open source project backed by Google and various universities, shows that Madagascar is the only African country with broadband speeds anywhere close to those available in Europe and Asia, as a submarine cable lands on the island. Most other African nations rely on 3G and 4G signals, or long-distance WiFi technology Wi-Max.
From Fahrenheit 451 to “censortech” (Financial Times)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 05/12/2020 - 10:53Liberty Global and Telefónica agree £31bn deal to merge UK groups O2 and Virgin Media
Liberty Global and Telefónica have struck a landmark deal to combine their British operations O2 and Virgin Media in a £31.4bn agreement that will reshape the UK’s telecoms market. Under the terms of the agreement, the companies will have equal ownership of O2 and Virgin Media and have built-in mechanisms for a potential float of the combined business in three years.
Crisis requires co-ordinated digital response
The challenges we face demand an unprecedented alliance between business and government. Broadband is needed everywhere to support vulnerable populations. What’s happening in Seattle (WA), the first US city affected by the coronavirus outbreak, provides a glimpse. A public-private alliance of the region’s largest employers, Challenge Seattle, became the town square for sharing data and best practices, managing the crisis and planning our return to work.
TV sports’ last dance: Sporting events will eventually resume but advertising sponsors may be less eager to return (Financial Times)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 04/29/2020 - 09:47Private sector races to build virus apps to track employees (Financial Times)
Submitted by benton on Sun, 04/26/2020 - 13:26Lockdown lifestyle: changing internet habits during the pandemic (Financial Times)
Submitted by benton on Sat, 04/25/2020 - 07:352 billion phones cannot use Google and Apple contact-tracing tech
As many as 2 billion mobile phone owners around the world will be unable to use the smartphone-based system proposed by Apple and Google to track whether they have come into contact with people infected with the coronavirus, industry researchers estimate. The figure includes many poorer and older people — who are also among the most vulnerable to Covid-19 — demonstrating a “digital divide” within a system that the two tech firms have designed to reach the largest possible number of people while also protecting individuals’ privacy.