Africa's Internet penetration will reach 50 percent by 2025 and
there are expected to be 360 million smartphones on the continent by
then, roughly double the number in the United States currently,
Mckinsey Consultants data shows.
Africa had 16 percent Internet penetration and 67 million
smartphones in 2013.
This growth is attracting interest from Internet companies such as
Google, Facebook and Wikipedia, which are striking deals with
service providers such as Vodacom, MTN, Bharti Airtel and Safaricom
to offer users free, or 'zero-rated' access to their sites and
services.
Facebook, through its Internet.org program, offers a stripped-down
version of its social network and some other sites for free in what
it says is an exercise to "connect the two thirds of the world that
doesn't have Internet access".
Google, in partnership with Kenyan mobile phone firm Safaricom, is
rolling out its "free zone" in Kenya, where email and the Internet
are available with no data charges, providing users stay within
Google apps.
Google has said its "free zone" is aimed at a billion people without
the Internet in the developing world.
France's Orange is offering free access to a pared-down version of
Wikipedia in some African countries, while South Africa's Cell-C
gives its customers free use of WhatsApp, a messaging service owned
by Facebook.
"DIGITAL PRISON"
Critics, however, say big service providers and Internet companies
are luring African users into using their services, giving them
opportunities for greater advertising revenue.
"It's like a drug pusher giving you a small amount and saying: 'If
you want more, you have to come and buy it'," Africa Internet access
specialist Mike Jensen said.
Giving Africans free access to some Internet sites may also stunt
innovation and limit the opportunities for African entrepreneurs,
making online technology another industry on the continent dominated
by big foreign companies.
In Nigeria, 9 percent of Facebook users say they don't use the
Internet, mobile service survey site Geopoll says.
"You are giving people the idea that they are connected to this free
open world of the Internet but actually they are being locked up in
a corporate digital prison," Niels ten Oever, head of digital at
rights group Article 19, told Reuters.
"Where will the African Mark Zuckerberg come from when they have no
chance to compete?"
REGULATION
There are also concerns that regulators in Africa lack the capacity
to track how telecoms companies allocate bandwidth. Telecoms firms
sometimes limit Internet speeds for some content, known as
"throttling".
[to top of second column] |
Telecoms operators say self-regulating bandwidth usage is important
to ensure heavy data users, such as people who download movies,
don't clog up bandwidth for lower Internet users.
The United States passed rules in February to ensure greater "net
neutrality", intended to make sure all content managed by service
providers in the U.S. is treated equally on the Internet, despite
opposition from telecoms companies.
But African countries don't have tough rules on "net neutrality",
meaning some services could be given faster access than others,
which some activists say could give bigger companies an advantage
over new market entrants.
The 24 sub-Saharan African countries tracked by Internet monitoring
site WebIndex have "evidence of discrimination" in the allocation of
bandwidth and have "no effective law and regulations" on Internet
freedom.
"There is little transparency into the Internet operators' deals so
it is hard to see where conflict of interests might be," Jensen
said. "You're left just having to trust them."
Despite concerns about limited regulation and an uneven playing
field, many experts argue that any improvement in Internet access in
Africa should be welcomed, given it could improve education, grow
businesses and alleviate poverty.
High speed broadband costs up to 100 percent of average per capita
income in Africa, compared to less than 1 percent in developed
countries, according to WebIndex.
"Would you tell someone who is hungry: 'Don't eat that greasy
burger, it's bad for you. Wait for something healthy?'" said Stephen
Song, an Internet researcher for the Network Startup Resource
Center.
"I'm not a fan of 'zero-rated' services but there is an argument to
say: 'something is better than nothing'."
(Editing by Anna Willard)
[© 2015 Thomson Reuters. All rights
reserved.] Copyright 2015 Reuters. All rights reserved. This material may not be published,
broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.
|