Nokia announces finalists in 2009 “Calling All Innovators” global developer competition

The news below was announced yesterday by Nokia. The finalists in the mobile apps competition seem to be bringing some interesting mobile solutions to mobile payments, job search problems and location aware services.

Espoo, Finland – Forum Nokia Developer Community (FNDC) today announced the finalists in its 2009 Calling All Innovators contest, a global mobile developer competition designed to generate applications and solutions that enhance the use of Nokia mobile devices in real-world scenarios.
The total cash and prizes for the 2009 Calling All Innovators contest are worth more than $250,000. The top three submissions in each category will receive a cash award, and prizes that include premium placement featuring the winning application in Nokia’s Ovi Store, and the opportunity to demo their winning apps at Nokia World.
Over 1,700 submissions were received from developers in 85 countries signaling a strong answer to Nokia’s challenge to think big and create mobile applications and services that can help build a better mobile user experience. More than 421,000 visits to the contest website from around the world engaged with FNDC, the world’s largest mobile developer community.
“The quantity and quality of the applications we received are astounding,” said Purnima Kochikar, vice president, Forum Nokia Developer Community, Nokia.  “We encourage our developer community to work with us to extend their market reach, taking advantage of our global presence, global distribution through Ovi Store and local market knowledge. Turning the spotlight on our developers in marketing efforts like Calling All Innovators is just one way we can expose the best mobile applications from our developer community to consumers around the world.”
A complete list of Forum Nokia’s Calling All Innovators finalists including video demonstrations of the applications can be found online at http://www.callingallinnovators.com.  Following are the finalists in the 2009 Calling All Innovators global contest:
Internet Innovation – Developers were asked to submit either web applications known as Web Runtime widgets, or websites which are optimized for mobile browsing with Nokia devices.
– Pixelpipe for Share Online – This WRT widget application from San Francisco-based Pixelpipe, enables individuals to create and configure Nokia Share Online to use the Pixelpipe Media Gateway to distribute photos, video, audio and files to more than 90 popular social networking, photo/video, and blog services directly from the built-in phone gallery and camera applications. Developer website: http://pixelpipe.com/
– Dianping – This widget for one of the top websites in mainland China provides information about more than 275,000 restaurants, including descriptions, recommended dishes, address, phone number, price range and more. Individuals can search for restaurants by districts, categories, price range and key words. The application includes access to more than 7.5 million restaurant reviews, and coupons for restaurants, too. Developer website: http://www.dianping.com/citylist
– Tech Buzz Homescreen Widget – The Tech Buzz Widget from UK-based Mippin, is a fast, elegant way to reliably access the latest tech news anywhere on Nokia mobile devices. It regularly downloads tech stories from across the web, displaying the headlines and images in rotation on the Nokia N97 home screen, to give users immediate access. Developer website: http://www.mippin.com/web/index.jsp?p=2
Flash – Developers were asked to submit applications that expand the capabilities of Adobe Flash Lite on Nokia devices.
– FLORIN – Personal Finance Tracker – With the FLORIN flash-based application from UK-based BlueskyNorth, consumers have access to a highly capable, but easy to use personal finance tracker for use on Nokia Series 60 5th Edition devices. Developer website: http://www.blueskynorth.com/index.php
– Reuters Slideshow – The Reuters Slideshow app from UK-based Tui Interactive Media, combines Flash and WRT widget functionality to deliver a constantly updated feed of pictures and news. Coupled with its mini-view for use on S60 5th Edition devices, the application offers an engaging way to catch up on the latest news. Developer website: http://www.tui.co.uk/
– ActiveChinese – This mobile educational application, from the company of the same name, is comprised of 10 flash-animated lessons for English speakers to begin to learn how to speak Chinese. A series of built-in flashcards provides the most useful word and phrases, and includes: the Chinese character, Chinese pronunciation, PinYin, and the English translation. Developer website: http://www.activechinese.com/
Emerging Markets and Mobile Necessities – Developers were asked to submit applications or solutions that are the most innovative application using Nokia platforms, ranging from SMS through Series 40 and S60 device platforms. All applications would be evaluated, including those developed using Java, Python or open source.
– Mobile JobHunt – Inspired by Nokia Life Tools in India, Mobile JobHunt from LEG aims to help people in rural areas in China. JobHunt provides timely and accurate job information from major cities on Series 40 Nokia phones. Other related services include employment news, skills training, employment legal rights, and entertainment. Developer website: http://www.leg3s.com
– Mobile Credit Card Terminal – Mobile Credit Card Terminal from 2C2P in Singapore gives business owners the ability to charge a credit card/debit card, and to manage transactions securely from Nokia S60 devices without additional equipment. Developer website: http://www.2c2p.com/
– Blue Home – Created by Binu Johnson in India, Blue-Home installed on a Nokia S60 mobile device, and hardware in the home that can be purchased for approximately $30, an individual can monitor and operate six home appliances via Bluetooth in the mobile device. Developer website: http://www.bluehome.info/
Apps on Maps – Developers were asked to submit new ideas that harness the power of location-aware services using Ovi Maps on Nokia devices. From all of the ideas submitted, 14 developers were given exclusive access to the Ovi Beta SDK to turn their ideas into a completed application for use on Nokia devices.
– PocketLife – from Wanaka, New Zealand, is an established location-based social network for web and mobile. As a location-based lifestyle app, with Pocket Life for Ovi Maps on your Nokia device, individuals can always be in touch with their closest friends, down to knowing precisely where they are at that given time. Using Pocket Life, individuals can discover new places, share photos, and quickly know their way around like a local. Developer website: http://www.pocketlife.com
– Ground Guidance – How do you navigate when there are no roads? Ground Guidance with Ovi Maps solves this problem. With technology originally built for the U.S. Army, St. Paul, Minnesota-based Primordial uses an innovative, patented technique, combined with a wide range of data sources to create a walk-able route where no road data exists. Pick any two points in the app, and the user will be presented with a walk-able path to take. Developer website: http://www.primordial.com
– Smart Eggs – submitted by Forum Nokia PRO member company, MSCorp based in Coral Springs, Florida, will bring the thrill of discovery and surprise to your explorations when using Ovi Maps. Crack open a Smart Egg to get a multimedia review of the latest movie, or tips about special promotions from nearby shops. Engage in a mobile treasure hunt with your friends, collecting codes inside Premium Smart Eggs. This mobile app for brands, artists, and venues interacts with consumers at the local level, while promoting the use of multiple Nokia services and platforms, including Ovi Maps and more. Developer website: http://www.mscorp.com/
The winners in the Internet Innovation, Flash, and Emerging Markets and Mobile Necessities categories will be announced on September 1, in the evening prior to Nokia World 2009 in Stuttgart, Germany at an awards ceremony being held at the Porsche Museum. The Apps on Maps winners will be announced on September 3, during Nokia World.
In the Flash category, there is an additional prize of $10,000 USD for one application that also received funds from the Open Screen Project Fund (http://openscreen.forum.nokia.com/) this year.
Finally, the top 10 submissions in all three categories will receive the “Judge’s Choice Award”, which provides a one-year membership in Forum Nokia Launchpad (value of 300 euros). All Forum Nokia Launchpad members receive access to exclusive resources and support.

Safaricom Endorses Directive on Mobile Subscribers Registration

Having recently posted on mobile money and Safaricom’s M-Pesa and its current financial well-being I am convinced of the long term viability of services such as the popular and successful M-Pesa in Kenya. In my posts I have touched on the topic of regulation and the convergence of the telecommunications industry with the banking sector. So, I was very interested to find the news item below via the Wireless Federation. Unfortunately, it appears that topics such as fraud and identity theft which have become common themes in discussions of online commerce are unlikely to spare the world of mobile communications. Regulators in Kenya have taken a stance and seem to have established a registration requirement for mobile subscribers.

safaricomlogoJuly 24th, 2009
Safaricom has endorsed recent presidential directive requiring all mobile phone subscribers to be registered, a way to curb criminal activities. The firm said it would support the efforts being undertaken to improve the security of citizens.

“An enabling law will certainly give us the much-needed legal muscle to extend this to our entire network. It would map out how these records are to be used and give us the legal right to ask our subscribers for their details,” said Chief Executive Officer Mr Michael Joseph.

The process is expected to complete within six months with the Communication Commission of Kenya spearheading the efforts.

mpesa“We need to do this as a country. Safaricom already has over half of our subscriber base registered through our M-PESA and PostPay services and the popular Bonga loyalty scheme, for which registration is a standard requirement,” added Mr Joseph.

“Registration is no panacea to our crime problems and it can never be surrogate to professional police investigations. As is stands, criminals will always steal phones and even identities of innocent people, but it is a necessary first step in helping us combat the recent upsurge of mobile-phone related crime. At the end of the day, crime is a societal problem whose conquest requires the concerted efforts of all. At Safaricom, we have always played our part and that will continue,” said Mr Joseph.

Compliance to Norms

Yet another great observation of tool use from Mr. Jan Chipchase and a photo to go with it!

The way I see this one has to do with the norm of putting on a seatbelt mediating between the subject (the driver) and the community (his passengers, other drivers, onlookers, passers-by, traffic policemen, etc). The driver chooses to be seen to conform to the norm, even though for whatever reason (seatbelt might not be working or he might consider wearing it too inconvenient) he actually is not. Apart from the legal liability of being seen as not wearing a seatbelt, the choice to be seen as to comply to the social norm might be motivated by a keep the cohesion of the community and not to be perceived as a truant driver.

Building Trust

I love this photo by Mr. Jan Chipchase’s from the streets of Xi’an!

I would interpret the newspaper picture of a doctor, laid out as a virtual shop floor for the improvised pharmacy as a “sign”. It is an artefact whose message visitors to the shop are expected to internalise upon seeing. I would speculate that the the newspaper photo aims to signal competence and professionalism. Thereby, upon seeing it customers are expected to feel reassured. Weather or not the trust-building process actually works would depend on the cultural-historical background of the customers. Yet again, thanks for a great example!

The Cloud, the Crowd and Public Policy in ICT4D

In the recent article “ The Cloud, the Crowd, and Public Policy“, published in the Summer 2009 volume of Issues in Science and Technology, Mr. Michael Nelson overviews the concept of the Cloud and its implications for public policy. The article (which I am reproducing below) traces the evolution pf ICTs from Phase 1: standalone devices, through Phase 2: the World Wide Web, to Phase 3: the Cloud. Reading the article led me to try to consider the parallel story of ICT4D. Certainly, I do not expect that the evolution of technology innovation in developing countries will necessarily follow the same path as that in the industrialised world. But I find it interesting to consider the possibilities for social, economic and technological development in light of the story given by Mr. Nelson.

I think that by now most would agree that the popular uptake of ICT devices for personal use in less developed countries only started around 2003-4 with the development of the pay-as-you-go business model for mobile services and the lowering of the cost of mobile phone devices. Currently, there is an intense competition among device manufacturers for the establishment of an ultimate and pervasive platform for mobile devices. The competition among Nokia’s Symbian, Google’s FOSS Android, Apple’s iPhone, RIM’s Blackberry, Microsoft’s Windows Mobile and others reminds me a lot of the early days of the personal computer and the well documented story about the struggle between Windows and Apple. Looking at it from this perspective, I think it is fair to say that mobile technology in developing countries is probably in Phase 1 of its development. Other events, such as the use (albeit limited) of GPRS and 3G in developing countries and the availability (also limited) of mobile Internet access in suggest that ICT4D might have reached Phase 2.

The parallel story of the evolution of technology for use in developing countries clearly unfolds at a much greater speed than the evolution and adoption of personal computing in advanced industrialised countries. ICT4Ds are also not developing in isolation from technological and business model solutions aimed at advanced industrial countries, and vice versa. Still, I would be interested in hearing any opinions on the matter. How do you imagine the ICT4D Cloud? What do you think are the public policy imperatives in the developing world?

The Cloud, the Crowd, and Public Policy by MICHAEL R. NELSON
A new age of more flexible, less expensive, and more secure computing will emerge soon if governments act wisely.

The Internet is entering a new phase that represents a fundamental shift in how computing is done. This phase, called Cloud computing, includes activities such as Web 2.0, Web services, the Grid, and Software as a Service, which are enabling users to tap data and software residing on the Internet rather than on a personal computer or a local server. Some leading technologists have forecast that within 5 to 10 years, 80% or even 90% of the world’s computing and data storage will occur “in the Cloud.”

Although the move toward the Cloud is clear, the shape of the Cloud—its technical, legal, economic, and security details—is not. Public policy decisions will be critical in determining the pace of development as well as the characteristics of the Cloud.

The evolution of personal computing has occurred in three distinct phases. In phase 1, computers were standalone devices in which software and data were stored; typical applications were word processing and spread sheets. Phase 2 was marked by the emergence of the World Wide Web, which made it possible to access a wealth of data on the Internet, even though most users still relied on software that ran on individual machines; the quintessential application was the Web browser. In phase 3, most software as well as data will reside on the Internet; a wide variety of applications will proliferate because users will no longer have to install applications software on their machines.

Most of the work we do with computers is still done using phase 1 or phase 2 tools, but more and more people, especially among the younger generation, are starting to take advantage of the power of the Cloud, which offers:

  • Limitless flexibility. By being able to use millions of different pieces of software and databases and combine them into customized services, users will be better able to find the answers they need, share their ideas, and enjoy online games, video, and virtual worlds.
  • Better reliability and security. No longer will users need to worry about the hard drive on their computers crashing or their laptops being stolen.
  • Enhanced collaboration. By enabling online sharing of information and applications, the Cloud provides new ways for working (and playing) together.
  • Portability. The ability of users to access the data and tools they need anywhere they can connect to the Internet.
  • Simpler devices. Since both their data and the software they use are in the Cloud, users don’t need a powerful computer to use it. A cell phone, a PDA, a personal video recorder, an online game console, their cars, even sensors built into their clothing could be their interface.

Cloud computing has the potential to reduce the cost and complexity of doing both routine computing tasks and computationally intensive research problems. By providing far more computing power at lower cost, Cloud computing could enable researchers to tackle hitherto impossible challenges in genome research, environmental modeling, analysis of living systems, and dozens of other fields. Furthermore, by enabling large distributed research teams to more effectively share data and computing resources, Cloud computing will facilitate the kind of multidisciplinary research needed to better understand ecosystems, global climate change, ocean currents, and other complex phenomena.

Combining the power of Cloud computing with data collected by thousands or even millions of inexpensive networked sensors will give scientists new and exciting ways to track how our planet and its ecosystems are changing. At the same time, such sensor nets will give entrepreneurs new ways to provide new services, ranging from traffic monitoring to tracking livestock to improving surveillance on the battlefield or in high-crime neighborhoods.

The government role

The pace of development and deployment of the Cloud will depend on many different factors, including how quickly the basic technology matures, how quickly the computer and telecommunications industries agrees on standards, how aggressively companies invest in the needed infrastructure, how many cost-effective, compelling applications are developed, and how quickly potential users accept and adopt this new way of purchasing computing resources.

Government policy can influence each of these factors. And there are other ways in which governments can accelerate or hinder the growth of the Cloud. Just as the pace of development of the Internet has varied by country and industry, the pace of development of the Cloud will vary widely. The key policy factors that will influence the pace of progress include:

Research. Giving researchers around the world access to Cloud computing services will lead to a further internationalization of science and a broadening of the base of first-class research. It will make it much easier to participate directly in multi-site projects and to share data and results immediately.

But how this happens will depend on decisions made by government research agencies. Will they make the investments needed to provide Cloud services to a large portion of the research community? Or will separate Cloud initiatives be funded that are restricted to a narrow subset of researchers with especially large computational needs? Precommercial research is still needed on some of the building blocks of the Cloud, such as highly scalable authentication systems and federated naming schemes. Will there be sufficient funding for this critical R&D? Will government agencies (and the politicians who determine their budgets) be willing to fund Cloud services that will be increasingly international? Will they be willing to invest government money in international collaborative projects when the benefits (and funding) will be spread among researchers and businesses in several countries?

Privacy and security. Many of the most successful and most visible applications of Cloud computing today are consumer services such as e-mail services (Google Mail, Hotmail, and Yahoo Mail), social networks (Facebook and MySpace), and virtual worlds such as Second Life. The companies providing these services collect terabytes of data, much of it sensitive personal information, which is then stored in data centers in countries around the world. How these companies, and the countries in which they operate, address privacy issues will be a critical factor affecting the development and acceptance of Cloud computing.

Who will have access to billing records? Will government regulation be needed to allow anonymous use of the Cloud and to put strict controls on access to usage records of Cloud service providers?

Will government regulators be able to adapt rules on the use of private, personal information when companies are moving terabytes of sensitive information from employees and customers across national borders? Companies that wish to provide Cloud services globally must adopt leading-edge security and auditing technologies and best-in-class practices. If they fail to earn the trust of their customers by adopting clear and transparent policies on how their customers’ data will be used, stored, and protected, governments will come under increasing pressure to regulate privacy in the Cloud. And if government policy is poorly designed, it could stymie the growth of the Cloud and commercial Cloud services.

Access to the Cloud. Cloud computing has the potential to dramatically level the playing field for small and mediumsized businesses (SMBs) who cannot currently afford to own and operate the type of sophisticated information technology (IT) systems found in large corporations. Furthermore, SMBs will also be in a position to offer their local knowledge and specialized talents as part of other companies’ services. Likewise, researchers, developers, and entrepreneurs in every corner of the world could use Cloud computing to collaborate with partners elsewhere, share their ideas, expand their horizons, and dramatically improve their job prospects—but only if they can gain access to the Cloud. Telecommuters and workers who are on the road will also have access to the same software and data used by those in the office, provided that we increase broadband access in the home and over wireless connections.

As a result, development of the Cloud will increase pressure on governments to bridge the digital divide by providing subsidies or adopting policies that will promote investment in broadband networks in rural and other underserved areas. Unfortunately, the main impact of many previous efforts to promote network deployment has been to distort the market or protect incumbent carriers from competition. As Cloud computing become critical for a large percentage of companies, governments will need to find cost-effective ways to ensure that homes and businesses have affordable access to the Cloud no matter where they are located.

E-government and open standards. Cloud computing could provide huge benefits to governments. The Cloud is not a magic wand for solving hard computing and managerial problems, but it will reduce barriers to implementation, eliminate delays, cut costs, and foster interagency cooperation. A few pioneers, such as the government of Washington, DC, have already demonstrated the huge potential of Cloud computing for e-government. Vivek Kundra, then the chief technology officer for DC, led an effort to migrate thousands of DC government employees to Google e-mail and office software based in the Cloud. “Why should I spend millions on enterprise apps when I can do it at one-tenth the cost and ten times the speed?” he said in 2008. “It’s a win-win for me.”

Cloud computing will be particularly attractive to government users because of its increased reliability and security, lower maintenance costs, and increased flexibility. Running government operations on a unified Cloud infrastructure will be more secure and reliable, and less costly, than trying to maintain and manage hundreds of different systems. In addition, if done right, Cloud computing can help governments avoid being locked in to a small number of vendors.

Governments have the potential to be model users of Cloud computing. As the largest economic entity in most countries, government has the leverage to set standards and requirements that can influence actions throughout the economy. Just as U.S. federal government Web sites demonstrated the power of the Web and inspired state and local governments and companies to create online presences, national governments can be early adopters of Cloud computing, which would demonstrate and publicize the technology. But if governments are going to become early adopters of Cloud services, they must overcome bureaucratic, regulatory, and cultural barriers to resource sharing that could slow the adoption of Cloud computing. Government IT procurement rules covering purchase of hardware and software must be updated to enable purchase of Cloud services.

U.S. government procurement decisions in the 1980s, which led to the widespread use of the Internet Protocol to link together previously unconnected agency networks, were a critical driver at a crucial time in the development of the Internet. Likewise, major government users could play an important role by compelling industry to quickly reach consensus on open, international Cloud standards so that government suppliers, contractors, and partners would be able to easily tap into government-funded Cloud services.

Today, many different grid and Cloud architectures rely on incompatible proprietary software. Achieving the full potential of Cloud computing will require a “Cloud of Clouds”: different network-based platforms all linked together by common middleware, so that data and applications software residing on one company’s piece of the Cloud can be seamlessly combined with data and software on systems run by another Cloud service provider.

Competition and antitrust. The structure of the Cloud will be defined over the next few years as key players establish the standards and technologies for Cloud services and as business models and business practices evolve. Perhaps the most important factor determining how the Cloud evolves is whether one company or a handful of companies are able to achieve a dominant position in the market for Cloud services or whether the Cloud becomes an open interoperable system where hundreds or even thousands of different companies are able to build and run part of an interlinked, interoperable Cloud capable of running different applications developed by millions of developers around the globe.

With the Internet, strong economic benefits and customer demand both pushed network service providers to link their different networks and create a network of networks. The situation may not be as clear-cut with the Cloud, and some companies building the infrastructure of the Cloud may be able to use economies of scale, ownership of key intellectual property, and first-mover advantage to block or slow competitors. Governments will need to watch carefully to see that companies do not use their dominant position in one sector of the IT or telecommunications market to gain an unfair advantage in the market for Cloud services. A Cloud built by only one or two companies and supporting only a limited set of applications would not be in the best interest of either individuals or corporate customers.

Governments need to take cautious rather than radical actions at this time, and to promote open international standards for the Cloud so that users will be able to switch Cloud service providers with a minimum of cost and risk. Flexible, far-sighted government policy and procurement decisions could promote interoperability, without dictating a particular architecture or set of standards for the Cloud. Since the Cloud is still evolving rapidly, governments need to allow and encourage different companies and groups to experiment. For instance, in government procurements for cloud services, governments can require interoperability and migration plans in case an agency wishes to change Cloud service providers at a later date, without specifying a particular standard or a particular company’s service. In the 1980s and 1990s, when personal computers were being widely adopted, some governments took the wrong approach; they chose Microsoft Word as their government-wide word-processing standard, rather than embracing an open standard such as the Open Document Format and requiring all vendors to support it. Later, some of those same governments had to resort to antitrust actions against the Microsoft monopoly they helped create.

Wiretapping and electronic surveillance. One of the thorniest issues related to the Cloud may be electronic surveillance, particularly when it spans international borders. In the United States, citizens are protected by the Constitution against unreasonable search and seizure. In most cases, the police must get a search warrant to examine data on someone’s home computer. It is not at all clear that the same data are protected if they are backed up in a data center in the Cloud, particularly if that data center is in another country. And if the situation within the United States is unclear, it is even less clear how and when U.S. or other intelligence services can access data from noncitizens stored in the Cloud. If users believe that governments will be monitoring their activities, their willingness to use the Cloud for important functions will surely decrease.

Intellectual property and liability. Related to the question of wiretapping is whether governments will try to enforce laws against online piracy in ways that limit or slow the development of Cloud services. By giving customers access to almost unlimited computing power and storage, Cloud services could make it even easier to share copyrighted material over the Internet. Will Cloud service providers be required to take special measures to prevent that? Will they be liable for illegal activities of their customers? Would doing so make it impractical for companies to provide Cloud services to the general public?

Consumer protection. If companies and individuals come to rely on Cloud services such as e-mail, word processing, and data backup, and then discover that the services are down for a protracted period of time, or worse, that their data are lost, they will seek recourse—most likely in court. If the reliability of Cloud services becomes a serious problem, state and national governments may step in to ensure that customers get the service they expect.

What kind of liability will a company that provides Cloud services be expected to assume in the event that there are serious outages? If a program running in the Cloud malfunctions, it could affect other users. Yet tracking problems in the Cloud and assigning responsibility for failures will be difficult. The Internet is already causing telecommunications companies and the courts to adopt new approaches to assigning liability for outages and security breaches.

Crafting a consistent global approach to this problem will not be easy, but if it can be done, it could increase consumer trust and significantly accelerate the adoption of Cloud services. Given the difficulty of finding an international governmental approach to consumer protection in the Cloud, a global self-regulatory approach based on best practices, insurance, and contract law may be faster, more flexible and adaptable as technology evolves and new services are offered, and more effective.

Taking the lead

Governments will play a critical role in shaping the Cloud. They can foster widespread agreement on standards, not only for the basic networking and Cloud communication protocols, but also for service-level management and interaction. By using the power of the purse in their IT procurement policies, governments can pressure companies to find consensus on the key Cloud standards.

Governments need to assess how existing law and regulations in a wide range of areas will affect the development of the Cloud. They must both “future-proof” existing law and ensure that new policy decisions do not limit the potential of this revolutionary new approach to computing.

The greatest concern would be premature regulation. The Cloud will be a fundamental infrastructure for the economy, national security, and society in general. A natural reaction would be to demand uniformly high quality and to regulate a number of features and services that use it. But without a lot more experience, we simply do not know enough about what the right set of underlying services will be, what are appropriate differences in price and quality of services, what techniques will be best for providing reliable service, and where the best engineering tradeoffs will be.

Governments can add value by encouraging experimentation and new services. They must avoid locking in the wrong technology, which will either put a country at a competitive disadvantage or reduce the value of the Cloud as a whole. Governments must follow industrial practice as much as possible rather than mandating untried solutions.

Like the Internet itself, the Cloud is a disruptive technology that challenges existing business models, institutions, and regulatory paradigms. As a result, there is likely to be resistance from many different quarters to the widespread deployment of Cloud technologies. Governments must be willing to challenge and change existing policies that could be used to hinder the growth of the Cloud. Simply trying to adapt existing regulations to the Cloud might allow entrenched interests to significantly delay the investment and effort needed for widespread use of Cloud computing. Because Cloud computing is a fundamentally different approach to computing and communications, governments should consider fundamentally new approaches to telecommunications and information policy.

Many of the public policy issues, including privacy, access, and copyright protection, raised by Cloud computing are similar to Internet policy issues that governments have been struggling with for at least 15 years. However, addressing these issues for the Cloud will be at least twice as difficult—and five times more important. Because the Cloud is inherently global, policy solutions must be cross-jurisdictional. Because the Cloud is a many-to-many medium, it is not always easy to determine who’s responsible for what. And because the Cloud technology and Cloud applications are evolving so quickly, government policy must be flexible and adaptable. Because the challenges are so great and the opportunities so widespread, it is imperative that policymakers and the technologists developing the Cloud start now to look for innovative technical and policy solutions.

Iranian consumers boycott Nokia for ‘collaboration’

by Saeed Kamali Dehghan
Tuesday 14 July 2009 21.22 BST

The mobile phone company Nokia is being hit by a growing economic boycott in Iran as consumers sympathetic to the post-election protest movement begin targeting a string of companies deemed to be collaborating with the regime.

Wholesale vendors in the capital report that demand for Nokia handsets has fallen by as much as half in the wake of calls to boycott Nokia Siemens Networks (NSN) for selling communications monitoring systems to Iran.

There are signs that the boycott is spreading: consumers are shunning SMS messaging in protest at the perceived complicity with the regime by the state telecoms company, TCI. Iran’s state-run broadcaster has been hit by a collapse in advertising as companies fear being blacklisted in a Facebook petition. There is also anecdotal evidence that people are moving money out of state banks and into private banks.

Nokia is the most prominent western company to suffer from its dealings with the Iranian authorities. Its NSN joint venture with Siemens provided Iran with a monitoring system as it expanded a mobile network last year. NSN says the technology is standard issue to dozens of countries, but protesters believe the company could have provided the network without the monitoring function.

Siemens is also accused of providing Iran with an internet filtering system called Webwasher.

“Iranians’ first choice has been Nokia cellphones for several years, partly because Nokia has installed the facility in the country. But in the past weeks, customers’ priority has changed,” said Reza, a mobile phone seller in Tehran’s Big Bazaar.

“Since the news spread that NSN had sold electronic surveillance systems to the Iranian government, people have decided to buy other company’s products although they know that Nokia cellphones function better with network coverage in Iran.”

Some Tehran shops have removed Nokia phones from their window displays. Hashem, another mobile phone vendor, said: “I don’t like to lose my customers and now people don’t feel happy seeing Nokia’s products. We even had customers who wanted to refund their new Nokia cellphones or change them with just another cellphone from any other companies.

“It’s not just a limited case to my shop – I’m also a wholesaler to small shops in provincial markets, and I can say that there is half the demand for Nokia’s product these days in comparison with just one month ago, and it’s really unprecedented. People feel ashamed of having Nokia cellphones,” he added.

News of the boycott has appeared on the front page of Iranian pro-reform papers such as Etemad-e Melli, owned by the reformist candidate Mehdi Karroubi. Hadi Heidari, a prominent Iranian cartoonist, has published an image of a Nokia phone on a No Entry traffic sign.

A Nokia spokeswoman refused to comment on the company’s sales in Iran.

The Iranian authorities are believed to have used Nokia’s mobile phone monitoring system to target dissidents. Released prisoners have revealed that the authorities were keeping them in custody on the basis of their SMS and phone calls archive, which was at officials’ disposal.

One Iranian journalist who has just been released from detention said: “I always had this impression that monitoring calls is just a rumour for threatening us from continuing our job properly, but the nightmare became real when they had my phone calls – conversations in my case.

“And the most unbelievable thing for me is that Nokia sold this system to our government. It would be a reasonable excuse for Nokia if they had sold the monitoring technology to a democratic country for controlling child abuse or other uses, but selling it to the Iranian government with a very clear background of human rights violence and suppression of dissent, it’s just inexcusable for me. I’d like to tell Nokia that I’m tortured because they had sold this damn technology to our government.”

NSN spokesman Ben Roome said: “As in every other country, telecoms networks in Iran require the capability to lawfully intercept voice calls. In the last two years, the number of mobile subscribers in Iran has grown from 12 million to over 53 million, so to expand the network in the second half of 2008 we were required to provide the facility to intercept voice calls on this network.”

In other sectors, state-run TV has also been targeted by protesters who have listed products advertised on its channels and urged supporters to join a boycott. Companies are running scared, and viewers have noticed the number of commercials plummet.

“We don’t have many choices to show and continue our protests. They don’t let us go out, they have killed many, we are threatened to text people or distribute emails, they have summoned people who shout Allahu Akbar [‘God is great’] on rooftops at nights, so we need to look for new ways,” said Shahla, a 26-year-old Iranian student.

“I can obviously see on the TV that they are facing an [advertising] crisis. This at least shows them how angry people are,” she added.

The SMS boycott, meanwhile, has apparently forced TCI into drastic price hikes. The cost of an SMS has doubled in recent days. Protesters view the move as a victory.

via Iranian consumers boycott Nokia for ‘collaboration’ | The Guardian.

Searching Where Google Can’t

by Ken Banks, IDG News Service

Wednesday, July 08, 2009 9:40 AM PDT

We read a lot about the delivery, and popularity, of SMS services such as market prices, health advice and job alerts in developing countries, information there is clearly a need for. Only last week Grameen’s AppLab initiative, in conjunction with Google and MTN, launched a suite of SMS services in Uganda. These are the services you’ll get to hear most about when you search the Web, trawl the blogosphere and attend various conferences on the subject. It all seems pretty sewn up on the content side — I mean, what else could people earning a few dollars a day at most possibly want?

I remember my days back in Nigeria, where I worked for the best part of 2002 at a primate sanctuary in Calabar. The mobile phone networks weren’t quite operational yet — there was sometimes a signal and sometimes it worked — but the number of Internet cafes was on the rise. I remember going in during the evenings, usually to find people generally entering competitions to win cars or holidays, looking at females (and males) in varying degrees of undress, trying to find a partner on a dating site, or sending and receiving e-mail. Clearly, this wasn’t the only use of the Internet in Calabar, but nevertheless it interested me to see what people did online once you gave them the opportunity to get there. Let’s put it this way, few people were doing their homework, looking up university education options, checking the price of matoke or learning how to stay fit.

A couple of years ago during my time at Stanford University, I met Rose Shuman, a young entrepreneur living in Berkeley, California. With a background working in developing countries and a masters in international development, Rose had developed a clever “intercom” style box which, when placed in a rural location, allowed people access to the information they sought in a slightly unusual, but innovative manner. It was a one-step-removed type of Internet access.

It works like this: A villager presses a call button on a physical intercom device, located in their village, which connects them to a trained operator in a nearby town who’s sitting in front of a computer attached to the Internet. A question is asked. While the questioner holds, the operator looks up the answer on the Internet and reads it back. All questions and answers are logged. For the villager there is no keyboard to deal with. No complex technology. No literacy issues. And during early trials at least, no cost. Put simply, Question Box, as it’s called, provides immediate, relevant information to people using their preferred mode of communication, speaking and listening. I thought it was great and offered to help.

When I first met Rose she was testing her first Question Box, which had been placed in Phoolpur village in Greater Noida, close to New Delhi, in September 2007. These early prototypes used landlines to connect the Box to the operator, and this has proved to be the weakest link in the technology chain. A reliance on landlines also severely restricts the location where a Box can be placed. It was clear she had a fixed-line problem waiting for a mobile solution — expect to see these rolling out soon.

Since I met Rose in 2007, a lot has happened. A number of shrewd appointments have seen African technology gurus such as Jon Gosier, of Appfrica fame, brought on board. This week Jon launched a very interesting Question Box-related Web site, “World Wants to Know“, which displays the questions being asked in real time. As Jon himself put it, it’s allowing “searching where Google can’t.”

Because many users are, to all intents and purposes, off-grid, some of the data Question Box has been collecting is priceless. When you allow rural people in developing countries to ask any question, what do they ask? What’s important to them? Does it follow our health information model, or market prices idea, or an anticipated need for paid employment? Rose, Jon and the team continue to work through the data, but I can tell you that the results are not only cool, they’re fascinating.

Sure, there are a few of the more likely suspects in there — people asking for exam results, health questions, inquiries about land rights and food commodity prices. But there is also a demand for all sorts of other types of data, much of which I’d never have anticipated. Keep an eye on the Question Box Web site for more.

All of this leads us to a wider, more fundamental issue. Often when we plan and build mobile solutions for developing (or emerging) markets, we forget, neglect or are just plain unsure how to ask the users what it is that they want. The irony might be that, here at least, Question Box might end up being the answer we’re looking for.

via Searching Where Google Can’t – Business Center – PC World.

Obama’s Speech in Ghana by SMS

The visit of President Obama in Ghana has given an opportunity of the US administration to reach out to people all over the world via mobile technology. This is an exciting attempt at participatory government and inclusion of members of the public in policy-making via mobile technology. Even though the concept has existed among mGovernment practitioners and academics for quite a while now, its successful implementations are few and far between. I hope that the enthusiasm which Mr. Obama is able to harness wherever he appears will give prominance to the idea, and encourage polititians elsewhere to seek its replication.

by Mike Grenville
Fri, 10 Jul 2009
The US Department of State is offering highlights from the speech by President Obama in Ghana on Saturday 11th July by SMS.

Working with Clickatell the US Department of State is reaching out to citizens around the world by SMS during an important speech to be given by President Barack Obama tomorrow, July 11, 2009 from Accra, Ghana.

Anyone around the world can sign up to receive live speech highlights in English or French via SMS. In addition, enrolled participants can send their text message speech comments via their mobile phone back to the US Department of State, where selected responses will be posted online. President Obama will also answer selected questions directly by radio broadcast in Africa.

It will also be possible to send back comments to the Obama Speech SMS highlights – via standard 2-way mobile SMS reply with selected comments posted online: http://www.america.gov/ghana_comments.html

International/Non-US citizens can enroll now online at: http://www.america.gov/sms.html

In Africa sign up can be directly by mobile: To send a text message to President Obama from anywhere in Africa except Burundi, the Central African Republic and Togo, simply text ‘English’ or ‘French’ to +61418601934. If you do not receive a confirmation of your enrollment within 10 minutes, please send again to +45609910343. For Burundi and the Central African Republic, text ‘English’ or ‘French’ to +46737494514. For Togo, text ‘English’ or ‘French’ to +4915705000946 For Kenya use short code 5683; for Ghana use short code 1731; for Nigeria use short code 32969; and for South Africa use short code 31958.

via 160 Characters Association

G8 Shift Away From Food Aid Towards Agriculture Investment

Today’s biggest news appears to be the shift in G8 food security policy reported by the Financial Times. It seems that the “L’Aquilla Food Security Initiative” at the forthcoming G8 summit will take forward an international policy move away from food aid and towards support for agriculture. It is expected that later this week the G8 (with the US and Japan providing the bulk of the funding) will announce more than $12bn for long-term agricultural development, particularly in Africa.

The background to the story includes the impacts on food security of the 2007 food crisis, the 2008 petrol price hikes and the ongoing international financial crisis.

The world’s first reaction to the 2007 food crisis, which saw record prices for crops such as wheat and rice triggering food riots from Haiti to Senegal, was to increase food aid. The UN’s World Food Programme doubled its budget to more than $5bn. The thinking since then has shifted, with Japan and the US leading the way in talking about helping poor countries, particularly in Africa, to feed themselves.

Mr Nwanze, a Nigerian national, says, “The financial crisis is worsening food security in many developing countries,” he says. “Wholesale food prices had been falling but prices remain very high in developing countries.” He commments on the policy shift by saying,  “Too much of the first [food aid] could flood African domestic agricultural commodities markets, starving local agriculture. Too little and the farmers who are supposed to produce the local food could perish before their first crop.”

Revised approach to fighting hunger. Photo: EPA, Telegraph

I think that Mr Nwanze’s statement sums up the need for food price monitoring and market information systems in Africa. I hope that the revised international approach to fighting hunger will reduce the emphasis on response (often too little too late) and will focus on monitoring food stocks, aleviation of chronic food insufficiency and prevention of shocks.

I think that affordability and therefore access to food is a bigger problem than its availability. When food security is conceptualised as a long-term, local issue, it is significant to monitor the prices of agriculture inputs (food, fertilizers, seeds etc.) in food producing regions and the prices of agriculture outputs at local, as well as national and international commodity markets. When farmers are provided with information about the prices of the commodities produced by them, they can use that information in making their seeding, planting and harvesting decisions. Conversely, the provision of information at markets and commodity exchanges about the stock availability of farming produce and the direction of its flow, can significantly improve the resilience of the food supply chain and avoid bottlenecks.

via FT.com / In depth – Poor nations look for help to feed themselves.

via G8 countries shift from food aid to investing in agriculture – Telegraph.

AppLab launched in Uganda by Grameen, Google and MTN

This Monday, 29 June 2009 turned out to be a rather momentous day for anyone interested in ICTs for development in general, and mobile content-driven information services, in particular. The Grameen Foundation announced the launch of its AppLab in Uganda, realised in collaboration with the Internet search and services giant Google and the African mobile operator giant MTN.

The press release gives details of the 5 SMS-based mobile applications launched by the project. The  initiative is introduced in detail at the Official Google Africa blog by Rachel Payne, Country Manager, Uganda. The services fall with 3 silos:

  • Google SMS Tips, featuring: caterpillar
    • Farmer’s Friend, a searchable database with both agricultural advice and targeted weather forecasts
    • Health Tips which provides sexual and reproductive health information (family planning, maternal & child health, HIV/AIDS, STI/STDs, sexuality)
    • Clinic Finder, which helps locate nearby health clinics, their services and telephone numbers
  • Google SMS Search, an SMS-based mobile serach engine more consistent with Google’s original role.
  • Google SMS  Trader, which matches buyers and sellers of agricultural produce and commodities as well as other products. The services are SMS-based and designed to work with basic mobile phones to reach the broadest possible audience.

Needless to say, I have been very excited by the news about these new services. So, I took a couple of days to process and digest it. The news has caused quite a storm in the ICT4D community. The White African comments on the participation in this intiative of prominent stakeholders:

Beyond the applications themselves, what I find most compelling is how the Grameen Foundation collected such a high-powered group of partners. The list reads like a who’s-who of innovative mobile services and development in Africa with Google, MTN Uganda, Technoserve, Kiwanja.net, and BRODSI to name a few. It’s a mixture of for-profit businesses, local NGOs and non-profit tech organizations.

I agree that this is a significant observation. It is well recognised that the implementation of successful mobile services involves the syndication of mobile operators (in this case MTN) and content providers (read Google). But the success of mobile services implemented in Africa, largely depends on their the existence of a support network on the ground. The role the project of the Grameen Foundation, its Technology Centre in Uganda and their network of Village Phone Operators (VPOs) increase the potential for adoption of the new services.

Ken Banks explains how the Google SMS Tips service was tried through an AppLab/MTN “call centre” where  quieries from the users were received and short answers of maximum 160 characters were formulated. He brings up issues related to the process of development of IT services such as information behaviour* in developing countries, proximal literacy, HCI and prototyping. With regards to Google SMS Trader, which as a mobile commerce platform is of my primary interest to me,  Ken Banks that a “whole suite of technologies on which to base solutions, including J2ME, WAP, high-end smart phones, 3G and MMS” were considered during the development process and SMS was eventually chosen. Still, I think that the involvement of Google in services such as Farmer’s Friend and Trader opens up another frontline in the rivalry between Android and Symbian. The services provided by Google SMS Tips in Uganda are consistent with those introduced by Nokia Tools in India. The respective uptake and popularity of these services might hold the key to the eventual spit of the premium mobile contant market in the developing world between Android and Symbian.

* Information behaviour meaning, “the totality of human behaviour in relation to sources and channels of information, including both active and passive information seeking and information use”, definition by Wilson 2000.

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