A much needed conversation.

Whether we like it or not, many people on this list in many ways represent the intellectual capital of the Kenyan ICT sector and the question should probably be 'Where have WE failed at ICT' instead of 'Has the ICT Sector Failed'. The problem has been kicked as upstairs as it can go, and this is the top floor. It is our problem to own. This is the place where we shouldn't be afraid to ask each other the tough questions -- and today the question Edith posed is 'what went wrong?'. As Gilda says, accepting failure is simply unacceptable. This is not a witch hunt or schadenfreude, and I reject the notion that we should just call or txt someone to ask if help is needed. We're not pushing a car, this is a national election.

So lets figure out where we dropped the ball and keep it moving. Onward.

David.

On Wed, Mar 6, 2013 at 8:03 AM, Harry Delano <harry@comtelsys.co.ke> wrote:

Erik,

 

I think this is where Kictanet Secretariat can kick in and show  relevance in such a critical moment, where the

nation seems to find itself waiting with abated breath, or can we mandate Erik to do this on behalf..?

 

Does the IT team there understand the system deployed and now operational under their watch..? If so, can

the ICT fraternity  through our Secretariat write officially to get an understanding on what is happening, how

it works?  The flowchart on the system that guarantees integrity of the process despite these happenings..?

 

Oh by the way, could the PS have some input.....?  The days when we could spend time groping around in pitch

darkness are so long gone, or is it ...?

 

Harry

 

 

From: kictanet [mailto:kictanet-bounces+harry=comtelsys.co.ke@lists.kictanet.or.ke] On Behalf Of Erik Hersman
Sent: Wednesday, March 06, 2013 3:32 PM
To: harry@comtelsys.co.ke


Cc: KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Has the ICT Sector Failed?

 

My thoughts exactly Dennis.  Having the facts on how, who and what allows us to understand the situation.

 

I'm not sure why it's an issue to try and gather that information, especially when no one at the IEBC is openly sharing it.  

 

Erik Hersman

 

 

On Mar 6, 2013, at 3:26 PM, Dennis Kioko <dmbuvi@gmail.com> wrote:



With a BBC journalist tweeting " "@ggatehouse: Deputy chair of IEBC told me cannot rule out the theory their system was hacked. At the moment they simply don't know. #Kenyadecides" and a local media house running a story alleging hacking yesterday, we do need facts.

There are people out there peddling info claiming a certain group hacked into the servers, complete with provisional results "analysis" to show the same. 

This really doesn't put us in a pretty information where we can afford to sit and wait.

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