Welcome to the blog for the UN Forum on
Our Common Humanity in the Information Age

This forum will gather top-level speakers, including Nobel laureates and some of the leading thinkers and innovators of our time. They will focus on the values that unite our common humanity and how these values may be expressed globally through the Millennium Development Goals, empowered by the new and rapidly developing information and communication technologies.

We encourage you to use this blog to post thoughts and interact with other people participating in the forum. Your voice matters! We want to hear from you!

Monday, November 27, 2006

The Digital Divide

Its difficult to talk about 'uniting our common humanity and how these values may be expressed globally through the Millennium Development Goals, empowered by the new and rapidly developing information and communication technologies' without bringing up the digital divide. So often, the people most affected by the MDGs are the ones without the access to the technology and information. We must think strategically about access and not forget about 'the global south' We must find innovative ways that involve more people in the important conversations that are happening.

Its always been a struggle for me to balance cool technology that will deliver engaging information with information that is just plain accessible to the most amount of people worldwide. Here are some simple ideas that have proven effective:
  1. Downloadables that can be distributed offline
  2. Information centres that can be synched up to a central database
  3. Using old technology in innovative ways - Check out 'The Lifelines India Project'- a telephone-based question and answer service that enables marginalised communities in India to share knowledge and receive timely advice.
  4. Utilize leap-frog technology. The cell phone is rapidly becoming the most widespread way to access text information. In some places more people have access to cellphones than to the internet.
To read more on this see The Digital Divide Network.

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