Brazil Hosts UN Conference on Digital Inclusion

For the first time, Brazil is going to host the world conference “Wireless Internet Opportunities for Poor Communities in Latin America.” The event is part of a series of eight conferences in various countries about various themes related to wireless broadband applications.

In Brazil it will take place in the Federation of Industries of Rio de Janeiro (Firjan), on February 22-23, in Rio.


According to the Firjan, the conference, sponsored by the Federation in conjunction with the Wireless Internet Institute and the United Nations ICT Task Force and the government of the state of Rio de Janeiro, wants to identify the extant obstacles impeding access to digital inclusion because of local policies and regulations.


Over 100 mayors from Brazilian and Latin American cities, as well as government officials, will participate in the event.


Brazil’s General Budget of the Union foresees for this year US$ 79 million for the creation of a thousand “Casas Brasil”, telecenters that will have computers with access to the Internet, besides culture points and community radios. The idea is to allow the less privileged people known as Classes D and E in Brazil to have access to new technologies.


The secretary of Information Logistics and Technology from the Planning Ministry, Rogério Santanna, said in an interview that the Brazilian government is studying the creation of recycling centers for older computers that belonged to the public administration so that they can be refurbished and made available to the programs of digital inclusion.


Asked about the recent encounter of President Lula and the president of Microsoft, Bill Gates, Santanna, said that there was no conversation between Gates and the Brazilian government about open source software.


“The free software initiative is a strategic alternative for the Brazilian government to reduce costs, to reduce the dependence on suppliers. We are working, here in the Ministry to develop new and cheaper computer models that are  more appropriate to the country.”


ABr

Tags:

You May Also Like

67% of Brazilians Never Surfed the Internet, 54% Never Used a Computer

A study prepared by the Brazilian Internet Steering Committee released yesterday, November 8. shows ...

Brazil and Neighbors Are the Ones Shaping Up Any New US-Latin America Relations

Global economic disruption makes it seem events are overtaking analysis faster than people can ...

Almost 1 million Brazilians Stop Receiving their Family Allowance

Over 700 thousand Brazilians have lost their Bolsa Família (Family Allowance), a monthly voucher ...

Some Economists Now Believe Brazil Is in a Recession

Brazil held interest rates unchanged for a second straight time this week but did ...

Brazilian Rice Exports Grow, But Imports Are Twice as Big

In the first semester Brazil sold 232,000 tons of rice on the foreign market. ...

Brazil Slashes 30% from 2016 Olympic Games Expenses

The organizers of Brazil’s Rio 2016 Olympic and Paralympic Games are making cutbacks of ...

After US Agreement Colombia Wants Military Rapprochement to Brazil

Brazil and other South American countries are being welcomed by Colombia to increase military ...

Brazil Has 96.6 Million Cell Phones, 80% of Which Are Prepaid

There are 96.6 million celular phones in operation in Brazil. The figure was disclosed ...

Robots Roam Where Humans Can’t Go in Brazil’s Amazon

In an area of approximately 370 square kilometers (143 square miles) of Amazon rain ...

Brazil’s Development Bank Loans US$ 429 Million for Alternative Energy

The Brazilian Development Bank (BNDES) approved financing of US$ 428.1 million (1 billion reais) ...

WordPress database error: [Table './brazzil3_live/wp_wfHits' is marked as crashed and last (automatic?) repair failed]
SHOW FULL COLUMNS FROM `wp_wfHits`