In 2002, Kofi Annan, then UN Secretary General, put forth a challenge for Silicon Valley to ‘broaden its horizons’: “I hope the industry will bring more of its remarkable dynamism and innovation to the developing world.”
Implied by Mr Annan’s comments was a criticism that has since become more widespread: that the innovation engine room of global technology is too often focused on ‘first-world problems’, spending more time making disposable apps for wealthy Western consumers than tackling serious issues that blight the lives of millions.
Having apparently taken the criticism to heart, the giants of Silicon Valley are today visibly engaged in the developing world.
Internet giants Google and Facebook are both working on ambitious projects to connect the two thirds of the world that are not connected to the internet, a group that substantially overlaps with the four billion living on less than US$2.50 per day.
Internet.org, Facebook’s initiative, is collaborating with major telecommunications companies to make devices and service plans cheaper and to increase the availability of mobile networks. Google’s venture, Project Loon, aims to bring access to rural areas through high-altitude balloons that beam the internet down to earth.
Connectivity is important, but some critics have questioned how altruistic these initiatives are. After all, more internet users means more customers for both Facebook and Google. Might other needs, like electricity, water and hygiene, be more urgent?
Another common critique of the tech sector’s philanthropic efforts is that they value technical wizardy over practical benefit. For example, a start-up called Soccket produced a football that captures energy during a kick-about that can then be used as a portable power source. This ingenious solution was much praised in the technology community, but has so far yet to prove its value to those it was meant to help—it costs ten times as much as a more efficient solar lamp.
Perhaps the best way to draw Silicon Valley’s attention to developing world’s challenges is to appeal to its entrepreneurial spirit.
One way to do this is simply to offer cash prizes. The X-Prize Foundation runs corporate-funded public competitions that offer million-dollar rewards for solutions to challenges ranging from food security to tuberculosis diagnostics. Large-sum challenge prizes such as these provide a powerful incentive for innovation in areas where market forces alone do not encourage it.
But commercial projects can have transformational benefits too. Take M-pesa, the mobile money transfer system launched by Vodafone in Africa in 2007, which is credited with giving millions of people access to financial services for the first time.
Of course, solutions like M-pesa require a degree of infrastructure investment before they are even possible. In that light, Facebook and Google’s initiatives to promote internet adoption in the developing world—thereby providing a platform for digital start-ups that address its unique challenges—do not look so selfish.
How can we make disruptive technology accessible to the developing world? What role should the internet giants play? Join the discussion on the Future Realities LinkedIn group, sponsored by Dassault Systèmes.
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