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Showing posts from 2013

UCC not doing enough to sensitise the public on digital migration

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Kampalans lining up to buy GOTV decoders. What most don't know is that digital migration is not the same as subscribing to a digital PayTV provide r (photo courtesy of Daily Monitor) The confusion surrounding the recent switch-off of some TV stations in and around Kampala as equipment to enable migration to digital television was being installed on the Kololo TV mast exposed just how little sensitisation has been done to prepare the public for digital migration.  The Uganda Communications Commission (UCC) has done a poor job sensitizing Ugandans on the digital migration to the extent that even the few who  have an idea of what digital migration is about associate the move to digital with subscription services like StarTimes and GoTV. UCC has not done enough to sensitize the public on the purchase of free-to-air decoders (for which no subscription is required) and how these will work and it has instead kept quiet while the PayTV stations are raking in millions from pe

Mass indiscriminate Police arrests will ultimately be counter-productive

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Mbarara residents recently under police detention whose only crime  is not possessing ID. Photo by Colleb Mugume Courtesy of Monitor Publications. Early in the morning on Wednesday 3rd July 2013 the police in Mbarara municipality conducted a pre-dawn security operation in the municipality’s Kakoba division ostensibly to weed out criminal elements that have been terrorising the area's residents for some time. The event that triggered this operation was, supposedly, the murder of a World Food Programme employee Andrew Mpubani, who was killed outside his home in the area a few days earlier. During the raid the police rounded up hundreds of people and detained as suspects those who could not immediately identify themselves with resident Identity cards. While the police should ordinarily be applauded for vigorously trying to combat crime, one cannot help but think that the Kakoba operation was nothing more than a show for the public and media, which will ultimately prove counter-

Egypt's Waning Influence

Egyptian Foreign Minister Mohammed Kamel Amr resigned Tuesday, becoming the most high-profile minister to step down since protests against the rule of President Mohammed Morsi began over the weekend. Amr's resignation came after the Egyptian military issued an ultimatum Monday, demanding that Morsi and the ruling Muslim Brotherhood start a dialogue with opposition members within 48 hours, or risk the military stepping in to impose a "political roadmap" on all parties. This move comes amid the latest in a series of political crises in Egypt since the ouster of former President Hosni Mubarak in February 2011. The political turmoil facing Egypt, its political class and its powerful military has become almost a given, with all sides turning to public displays of unrest and emotion as often as they do to the democratic process. And as Egypt's political system evolves, it is becoming clear that -- with the exception of a few critical issues, including Gaza, the Suez Cana

Fare Thee Well James Gandolfini

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So, James Gandolfini is dead . Ordinarily an American actor's death would mean nothing more for me than a few minutes on the news and I'd be back to whatever I was doing. However, Gandolfini's passing triggered some personal memories. No, no, I didn't know "Tony Soprano" personally. However, 5 years ago I moved to Beijing where I was to live for almost a year and the first few weeks were quite lonely because I had just moved into a sparsely furnished apartment with no TV or anything I could pass time with and I had no friends. I bought a used laptop shortly after and one day as I was going home I came across a street vendor with all Six seasons of the Sopranos (which had just wrapped up a few months before). I cannot say I was a fan of the show having only watched a the first few episodes of season one on DSTV around 7 years earlier, but it was the only one he had in English and I was really not looking forward to another night in an empty flat with only

Is Information Technology all its been hyped to be?

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These days its hard to open a newspaper, watch TV or traverse the information superhighway without coming across an article or blog post praising IT and what a positive impact it has on business the world over or how information technology is literally capable of solving most of the problems known to man. However, despite the undeniable importance of IT in today’s world, sometimes the role (and importance) of IT seems to be overstated for different reasons and in a number of ways. A graphical representation of the Digital Access Index.  See how poorly Africa is  doing (Source: International Telecommunications Union) The rapid growth of IT and ICT use has led to a digital divide between those who have and those who do not have access to IT facilities and services especially in the poorest parts of the world. While the importance of IT is being discussed, it is worthwhile to realise that in some situations only a small section of the population can access this IT and thus the benef

Anti-gay bill claims more collateral damage

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Victoria University Kampala The controversial anti-homosexuality bill before the Ugandan parliament has claimed more collateral damage. The latest victims of this bill are the students of Victoria University in Kampala whose academic future is uncertain after the  University of Buckingham  in the UK has suspended its validation of Victoria University degrees because it is becoming  "increasingly concerned about the proposed legislation in Uganda on homosexuality and in particular the constraints on freedom of speech". The full University of Buckingham statement reads: Over the last few months, the University of Buckingham has been in discussions with our partners, Edulink, who own Victoria University in Kampala, Uganda, about our continued validation of some of Victoria University’s courses. We have both become increasingly concerned about the proposed legislation in Uganda on homosexuality and in particular the constraints on freedom of speech in this area. In

Uganda Law Society website hack: Wrong target Mr. Anonymous

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The Uganda Law Society  website has been hacked by  Anonymous , a Hacktivist group that has made a name for itself over the past few years, who claim they want to bring to the world's attention to the Uganda government's violations of human rights specifically in relation to some pending anti-gay legislation . "We have gone to the trouble of compromising the Ugandan Law Society's webserver to bring to your attention, and to the attention of the world, your government's gross breaches of human rights and justice"   The group had released a statement last year threatening some kind of action against Uganda government's network infrastructure and they have followed through by exploiting a vulnerability in the ULS website's security (which they cheekily pointed out). Ironically, the target chosen for the first attack happens to be one of those organisations at the forefront of fighting the anti-homosexuality bill that is before the parliament of