Greg Adamson
If today we provided a high speed connected device to every human in the world, this would not achieve the implied goals of "digital inclusion". Begin with the word "digital": based on the work of Nyquist (1928) this refers to the process of reducing all analogue messages to digits, usually "1"s and "0"s. While this may have been adequate for computerisation of engineering calulations or bussiness processes, it is entirely inadequate today. An alternative is to reconceptualise digital as cyberspace, a field of human endeavor. We should conceive of humans having access to a safe and trusted place, and we can address the barriers to such access. This allows us to consider such issues as cybersecurity, protection of the rights of the child, and a dignity-based approach to technology adoption. While this submission describes an existing program, the submission itself an individual one, not on behalf of that program.
The problem can be summed up in an assumption that the purpose of "digital inclusion" is inclusion in a digital economy.
Develop an approach to cyberspace consistent with Kant's dictum that humans should always be an end, never merely a means (eg a means to make money by selling products to a previously inaccessible community).
It helps humans live their lives, sing their song, dance their dance, in the new domain of cyberspace.
- Other
It addresses current and future problems created by the current formulation of this challenge, and other similar initiatives.
- Concept: An idea being explored for its feasibility to build a product, service, or business model based on that idea.
The program provides a bottom-up approach for digital challenges. When they move beyond the concept stage they are converted into standards development activities.