@Mildred,

thnx for your views.  irrelevant is indeed relative...but what I had in mind is the fact that Kenya is currently a content consumer rather than content producer.  And most of the content consumed from abroad tends to earn revenue for big player in US/EU e.g. Facebook, Google, Youtube just to name a few (am avoiding to mention Porn content, but this also earns revenue abroad :-)

Good points on incentives.

I know there are more broadcasters in lurking in the background.  Plse say something.  Many debates around local content regulations that demand 60% local vs 40% foreign broadcast. Is this a good thing?

Similarly, Equity shares in broadcast enterprises. Plse share ur views. The days is almost ending and tomorrow is another topic...

walu.




From: Mildred Achoch <mildandred@gmail.com>
To: Walubengo J <jwalu@yahoo.com>; KICTAnet ICT Policy Discussions <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke>
Sent: Thursday, June 23, 2016 9:06 AM
Subject: Re: [kictanet] Dy 2 of 10: How to Develop ICT Info-Structure

Good morning,

1. "some bandwidth activity may be irrelevant and may not add value to the socio-economic agenda of the nation."

Question: who determines what is relevant and of value? What will the criteria be? Content may just have the purpose of entertaining and not touch on weighty matters about the nation. (Regulation of content)

2.Incentives for content creators:

- reduce the license fee required to make a film and maybe even waiver it for noncommercial and student films
- embed content creation into the school curriculum


On Thursday, June 23, 2016, Walubengo J via kictanet <kictanet@lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
I want to thank those who took time to send views on Day1 topic.  It is not too late to add more views on Day1 topic. Just ensure you post the contribution against the correct title.

Today we move to Day2 theme: How to Develop ICT Info-Structure.
 
*Local Content, 
*Broadcast Content, Diversity, Cultural Identity
*Access to Information/OpenData
 *Local Application Development

Background:
Info-structure is what runs on the physical infrastructure.  Having empty cables with no activity is evidence of missing or under-developed infrastructure. Additionally, some bandwidth activity maybe irrelevant and may not add value to the socio-economic agenda of the nation.

So today we talk about what needs to be done to ensure a vibrant local content industry. Content includes broadcast (film), blogs, websites, etc.  We need to hear about the incentives we need to facilitate content creators & application developers work.  

How should Government Open-Data, River-wood and other Creative initiatives impact  local content economy?   What policy and strategy interventions can unlock the local content economy?

There is no right or wrong way of saying what you want to be captured.  We have a Secretariate that will extract and frame the issue in a suitable policy or strategy format.

We have 1 Day on this topic. Dont fear, just  fungua roho :-). 

walu.




--
Check out the Rock 'n' roll film festival, Kenya TV Channel!
http://kenyarockfilmfestivaljournal.blogspot.com