Address to ISOC (NIG) ’99
by Vint CerfWednesday, 20 January 1999
- Hotel Presidential, Port Harcourt, Nigeria.
Greetings. This is ‘Virtual Vint’ here, coming to you from Washington D.C.
Thank you for
inviting me to address you today. My only regret is that I
couldn’t join you in Port Harcourt
in person. Please accept my best wishes
for a successful meeting.
Today the conference organizers have asked me to talk about the future of the
Internet.
Specifically, I would like to sketch out what role each of
you can play in the development
of the Internet, both in Nigeria and in
Africa as a whole. And while I have some specific
ideas I would like
to share with you this morning, I would like you first to consider a more
basic question:
What is the most crucial ingredient in promoting economic, intellectual and
technological
development? Now I’m sure many of are considering a
variety of answers such as, ‘access to
natural resources’ or ‘an excellent
system of public education’. As important as those are, I believe
the key
factor is now - and has always been - the existence of free and unfettered
collaboration
between people of different cultures and
backgrounds.
In the time before the development of communications
technologies it was geography which
was the critical factor in
determining which areas enjoyed the best access to knowledge and
technologies developed elsewhere in the world. Such was the case
with the great cities of antiquity
that developed into crossroads of
commerce and knowledge, places such as Athens, Rome and Alexandria.
It was the development of communications technologies, starting the latter
half of the nineteenth
century, that began to gradually shrink these
geographic barriers. And from the invention of the telegraph,
the telephone,
television and radio we have seen that the deployment of advanced
technologies has
often presaged accelerated economic growth.
Today at the dawn of the twenty-first century we’re finding that
business will be powered, not only
along traditional trade routes of
old, but over fibre optic cables by way of Internet-enabled electronic
commerce. Already companies are constructing far ranging intranets
to knit together global operations,
allowing an auto maker to design a car
in Europe, manufacture its parts in Mexico and assemble them in
the United
States. Others are using intranets to automate their relationships with vendors
and suppliers.
Of particular interest to those of you in Nigeria is the speed at which
Internet and related technologies
are taking hold in the international
oil business. Up until recently the oil industry, as a whole, has
lagged behind other sectors of the international economy in terms of
Internet usage. But that is changing
rapidly as companies are seeking
improved information gathering, broad cost savings and improved
customer
service from Internet technologies.
One of the best examples of this comes from Africa itself: Founded in 1995,
the Embendy Afropedia was
originally intended to serve as an on-line
database about the African oil industry. In the interim, however,
the web
site has developed into the most comprehensive repository of information on the
web
concerning business and commercial activities on the continent.
Another important issue, in terms of electronic commerce, is the development
of guidelines for
the use of cryptography for confidentiality,
authenticity and the integrity of Internet transactions,
a topic that your
conference organizers have wisely put on the agenda for this meeting. Simply
put,
there is no substitute for free and open use of cryptography if we wish
to see electronic commerce
flourish in the next millennium.
So clearly, it is in your best interests to see that Africa as a whole,
and Nigeria in particular, is
well positioned to take full advantage of the
Internet in the coming Network Century.
Let me offer three specific suggestions as to how you can do that: First, it
is important for Nigeria to
embrace competition and deregulation in telecom
markets. Experience has shown that deregulation
always leads to lower
prices, better services and the introduction of new technologies.
Currently
Nigeria has very limited per person access to telecommunications
services. And the best to increase
this ratio is to inject competition into
the telecommunications mix.
Next it is vital that your country takes a leadership role in
encouraging regional network
connectivity in Africa. Too often all
around the world, Internet traffic that should be flowing directly
between
nations often flows first to network elements outside the region. And in fact
Africa will get
its own ‘on-ramp’ to the information superhighway as the
Africa One project, an effort to ring the
continent with fibre optic
connections, is completed in 1999. This is an important first step. And I
hope
all of you continue to work hard for progress in this area.
Finally, I would like to encourage all of you to help promote the acceptance
of the Internet in Nigeria.
It won’t be enough for your country to merely be
‘on the Internet’; rather it is critical that your
nation and its
people embrace the Internet and use it enthusiastically. Embracing the
Internet
also means joining with other nations around the world and taking a
place at the table to help administer
the global network - a role you’ll all
play as members of the Nigerian Chapter of the Internet Society.
As the Internet becomes a true global medium we are going to need the help
and support of individuals
like yourselves from around the world if we’re
going to govern the network in a manner that is
international, open and
fair.
In conclusion I would like to leave you with one last thought: While
encouraging the development of
the Internet is a worthy goal, we need to
keep in mind that the ultimate aim of this work is to integrate
Nigeria and
Africa into the web of electronic commerce and information exchange that has
brought so
much benefit to other parts of the world. Together, you can
take Africa and the Internet where no
other network has gone
before.
Thanks very much. See you on the Net.