Title: NEXT GENERATION POLICY AND REGULATION Key Challenges
1NEXT GENERATION POLICY AND REGULATIONKey
Challenges
Hopeton S. Dunn, Ph.D. Academic
Director, Telecommunications Policy and
Management (TPM) Programme, Mona School of
Business, UWI
Presented at the Caribbean Internet Forum 2008,
October 30, 2008, Port of Spain, Trinidad and
Tobago
2Next Generation Networks
- NGNs are IP-based telecommunication networks that
allow for the transport of integrated services
combining high-quality voice, video, image and
text across a single network at high speed
3Transitions
Plain Old Telephones Copper Cables Wirelines
Source TPM Programme, MSB
4Selected NGN Applications
- Global Positioning Systems
- WiMax
- Mobile Computing
- IPTV, mobile TV and mobile radio
- Mobile advertising and marketing
- Interactive Video Games, Virtual Communities
5Creating the Information Society A Global
Development Imperative
stakeholders need to continue working together,
focusing on concrete actions and projects in the
field of ICTs, supporting the development of the
inclusive information society, spurring
investment, employment and broader human, social
and economic development.
Dr Hamadoun I. Touré Secretary-General, ITU
6Poverty in Jamaica
- Poverty rate at 14.3 (based on 2006 estimates)
- Incidence of poverty increasing in rural areas
- Male-headed household consumption at a higher
level than female-headed households
I\NICT Plan Documents
Source PIOJ Poverty Mapping for Jamaica, 2008
7The Challenge of Interconnection
- It may affect existing interconnection
arrangements - New interconnection models may be required for a
new regulatory environment - Ensuring no discriminatory access behaviour even
to users in rural locations - Developing a transparent interconnection
regulatory framework
8Spectrum Management
- Phasing out of inefficient spectrum allocation
for accessibility by new NGN operators - Determining licence fees that are not prohibitive
to investors - Considering licence-free use of spectrum for
education / government purposes
9Universal Access
- NGNs promises universal access via cheaper voice
and affordable value-added services - However there is a challenge is in the widening
of digital divide due to uneven rollout between
rural and urban locations and between affluent
and low-income communities - There is also a challenge in regulating access
for the disabled and in making appropriate
content and tools available
10NGNs and the Universal Access Framework
11Universal Access Funding
- Should Universal Access funding should include
NGN Technology and Broadband Connectivity? - If so how would it be collected and what form
would it take? - Who should benefit from these funds the service
providers, the end-users, community access,
schools?
12Consumer Protection
- New and more complex security challenges for the
end-user - More personalized media may lead to unauthorized
disclosure of personal information and
preferences - SPAM / SPIT (Spam over Internet Telephony)
- GPS services may make consumers vulnerable to
being tracked or followed by criminals
13Content Regulation
- With the increasing number of media outlets it is
much harder to regulate the content available to
the public, especially in terms of inappropriate
content for children - There is also the problem of intellectual
property rights violation, which may be more
common in an NGN environment
14Further Challenges for Content Regulation
- The regulation of new economic spaces such as
virtual communities and interactive television - Peer-to-peer communication
- Mobile TV across national borders
- Pervasiveness and the risk of the consumer being
bombarded by marketing-driven content
15Regulatory Convergence
- As providers begin to offer a range of services
in ICT, a centralized body for its regulation
will become necessary - Although in the Jamaican context the proposal is
to converge the telecom, spectrum and broadcast
transmission regulation, there may be a need in
the future to incorporate financial regulation
16Achieving Effective Access
- Wilson (2006) distinguishes between Effective and
Formal access. - Formal Access Physical reach
- Effective Access Physical reach plus
- Financial affordability
- User expertise
- Ease of interface
- Relevance of content
- Effective Access - a necessary but not sufficient
condition to enhance ICT competitiveness
17Capacity Building
- NGN uptake depends on the availability and
quality of the content and applications - It will also depend on the level of training of
its users in using these applications for
personal and economic development - Suitable content for target populations including
e-government, telemedicine and e- learning
services will motivate uptake - Formal literacy and information literacy of other
types are necessary ingredients
18Formal Literacy and ICT Adoption
- Illiteracy impedes active use of text messaging
and advanced mobile applications among some poor
youth in inner-city communities - The 20 illiteracy rate in Jamaica is
concentrated among rural or inner city youth - Formal literacy must be addressed as we move into
being more knowledge-based societies
19Information Literacy A Crucial Component
- Speaks to the ability of an individual to
effectively and critically engage in the
participatory, networked culture - Information Literacy encapsulates a range of
other literacies - Media literacy
- Visual literacy
- Digital literacy
20Cyber-Crime Legislation and Education
- Cyber-Crime laws related to hacking and
unauthorized information sharing are needed - Education of consumers is a part of the
information literacy drive required
21Environmental Challenges
- Higher energy
- demand and
- therefore greater
- fuel consumption
- Increase in
- electronic waste
- (e-waste)
- Increased NIR exposure (non-ionizing radiation
exposure)
22Strategic Roadmap of ICT Development
e-Business and ICT Industry Development
Network Readiness and Infrastructure Development
Legislative and Policy Framework
Cultural Content and Creativity
e-Inclusion Open Access to ICTs
e-Government
Research and Innovation
Education and Training
23Strategic Development Outcomes
Expanded Job Creation, Entrepreneurship and New
Business Development
Greater Public Sector use and Citizen Adoption of
e-Government Processes
Accelerated Economic Human Development and
Global Competitiveness
Growth in Innovation and Development of New ICT
Products and Services
Greater Global Recognition of and Rewards from
Brand Jamaica
Highly Educated and Well-Trained Jamaicans
available to the ICT Sector
24Conclusions
- The main challenge that NGN bring is in the
development of the infrastructure, the legal and
regulatory framework and the human element in
harmony across the region for seamless
connectivity
25Sooner or later, all media content is going to
flow through a single black box into our living
rooms (or through the black boxes we carry with
us everywhere we go). (Henry Jenkins,
Convergence Culture)