Sunday, 8 September 2013

African dimensions of the Snowden saga: technologies of trust

The African growth and development story that gets the most airtime -- alongside sometimes misplaced hype about urbanisation and the 'rising middle class' -- is the proliferation of mobile telecoms (and gradual greater internet penetration).
 
The trend is not new now but the scope for innovative, cheap and wide-ranging platforms and services still excites for-profit outfits (telecoms, internet and consumer firms, and financial service providers), as well as policymakers interested in how expanding access to mobile technology and new media sources can help promote more reachable, responsive, and responsible government.
 
Some of the most exciting potential lies at the intersection of public and private sectors and interests: the significant scope in Africa for collaborative schemes and financing models that match corporate capital and dynamism with the policy authority and objectives of major public institutions -- think for example of the World Bank's work with Google Africa on deploying 'MapMaker' and community/crowdsourcing mapping technology in support of monitoring public services, political events, or humanitarian and disaster response efforts, and other partnerships on improving public access to government online data.  
 
Yet through mid-2013 discussion of the mobile/internet story in Africa has continued in isolation from the 'Snowden revelations' about the extent of US and other government agency access to private communications data, and the extent of corporate cooperation with security agencies in that process. Discussion of the pro-social impact of new technologies often lacks consideration of the down- or dark-sides to that, and the balance of interests in the user-provider-regulator triangle especially in those African countries where democratic space is constrained.
 
This week's blogpost is prompted by a brief line I spotted in the latest 'Zambia Weekly' letter alleging that the Zambian government had obtained a new ability to intercept email correspondence.
 
As noted in previous posts (see the three grouped here), new technologies merely provide a medium -- in a sense they are neutral as to the use made of them. Thus while pro-democracy activists welcome greater internet and mobile penetration and more repressive regimes generally dread it, the latter are also able to use such technologies to their advantage. In some cases, this will create dilemmas for consumer-facing telecoms firms operating in such settings in Africa, as the previous posts discuss.
 
Survey and anecdotal evidence suggests high levels of trust and goodwill among African consumers towards mobile phone companies (and the services they provide). This could prove an interesting 'social capital' resource for all sorts of initiatives. Yet, again, caution is needed in assuming that a greater technological imprint in governance or political processes in Africa will necessarily benefit pro-democracy forces, or necessarily engender public faith in electoral or other systems.
 
Greater proliferation of e-governance and i-politics has potential but will not necessarily mean intangible transfers of power to citizens over governments. Last week I returned from post-election Zimbabwe, where much controversy surrounded an Israeli-owned firm's role in managing the electronic voter's roll: some of our Africa experts at Oxford Analytica have examined the impact of new e-registration and e-voting technologies, explaining to clients how these may not necessarily win the confidence of voters nor improve electoral integrity. Indeed they might have precisely the opposite effect.
 
There is more work to be done exploring the extent and potential utility of public trust in telecoms service providers in Africa and their relations with host governments (see a previous related post here). 

Jo
 
ps - the public's trust was a key theme of Oxford Analytica's most recent (Edition 2) free quarterly 'Business and Society Monitor' (available here) which discusses the work of in-house experts who have been following and explaining the global industry and governance implications of the Snowden/NSA issue.

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