The 550 Challenge: Can We Connect Everyone In The World Online (Yes, Everyone) By 2018?

from the it's-a-challenge dept

Dan Berninger has launched an ambitious program (for which I’ve agreed to sign on as a supporter), called the 550 Challenge. The idea is straightforward: see if we can work towards getting every single person on the planet connected to the internet by February 3, 2018 — the 550th anniversary of Johannes Guttenberg’s death:

The 550 Challenge – the world borderless by February 3, 2018 – promotes the expansion of Internet access to include everyone on earth by the 550th anniversary of Johannes Guttenberg’s death. Gutenberg died on February 3, 1468 in relative obscurity before the printing press got credit for ending the Dark Age and setting in motion 200 years of accelerated progress in art, literature, and learning known as the Renaissance. The 550 Challenge seeks to realize the promise of the Internet as the basis for a new Communication Renaissance.

With economic turmoil around the globe, and various governments putting together all sorts of “make work” projects to try to boost the economy, Berninger (and those of us who have signed on) argue that nothing can help the economy like increasing communication among everyone on the planet:

A dramatic expansion of communication seems likely to prove more affordable than infrastructure projects, energy related interventions, and war. The nature of communication technology tends to shape the course of human affairs, because communication represents a key input to the global economy. Half of all energy gets consumed by moving people from one place to another, so improving communication can help addresss global warming and geo-political tensions generated by energy consumption.

A telephone call does not require a Green Card or engage the TSA, so communication technologies can lessen the dislocations associated with immigration, emigration, and the arbitrary power of birthplace over opportunity. The Arab Spring illustrates the threat communication poses to tyranny and utility for linking people across lines of conflict. Risks exist with any technology just as roads benefit people seeking to rob banks as well as the general public. The 550 Challenge merely asserts connecting everyone offers less downside risk than the disconnected status quo.

Connecting everyone on earth within six years seems ambitious, but it requires merely sustaining the existing pace of cell phone and Internet expansion. The process of connecting people may require first finding sources for food, water, and shelter as well as navigating dangerous conflict over borders, but the challenges nonetheless do not compare to the World War’s of the 20th century both of which played out in less than six years.

It’s an ambitious program, but the world needs ambitious programs, and this is one that seems worth supporting and doing anything we can to help it achieve its goals.

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Comments on “The 550 Challenge: Can We Connect Everyone In The World Online (Yes, Everyone) By 2018?”

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23 Comments
C# says:

Re: Internet for all? How about food for all?

Did you even read the whole article?

Connecting everyone on earth within six years seems ambitious, but it requires merely sustaining the existing pace of cell phone and Internet expansion. The process of connecting people may require first finding sources for food, water, and shelter as well as navigating dangerous conflict over borders, but the challenges nonetheless do not compare to the World War’s of the 20th century both of which played out in less than six years.

Kate Duhamel (profile) says:

cell phones

“The process of connecting people may require first finding sources for food, water, and shelter as well as navigating dangerous conflict over borders,..” I was in liberia shortly after the civil war ended, no plumbing, no electricity, no infrastructure, hardly any functioning economy, and yet everyone had a cell phone, and they managed community satellite TV for soccer games. Human ingenuity is powerful, so if people want to be connected, they will find a way.

kduhamel (profile) says:

connecting

“The process of connecting people may require first finding sources for food, water, and shelter as well as navigating dangerous conflict over borders,…” I was in Liberia shortly after the civil war ended. There was no plumbing, no electricity, no infrastructure, almost no functioning economy, and yet everyone had cell phones and they managed community satellite TV for soccer games. Human ingenuity is powerful – if people want to be connected, they find a way.

JackHerer (profile) says:

I am so into this idea

I have a massive amount of respect for the people working in developing countries trying to provide basic human needs like clean water, food and sanitary toilet/waste systems. However I think the “lets get them bread and clean water and we’ll worry about computers and mobile phones later” misses the point somewhat. Everything created by human beings was created by communication and collaboration. Connectivity and technology are the best and most efficient ways to collaborate and communicate and if we work towards a world where collaboration and communication infrastructure is in place globally and collaboration communication and organisation become trivial then it provides the bedrock to solve the difficult problems like food, water, sanitation, education and inequality. Lets get the world connected and then it will be so much easier to work out how to solve the hard problems.

Walter Dnes says:

Re: harmony via the web?

> I’ve often wondered how much it would promote good will and
> peace if the financial barriers to global communication
> were eliminated. Would we just start calling random people
> across the world just to say hi?

We’ve already got random people calling from India claiming that my linux machine is infected with Windows viruses, or selling “extended car warranties”. All we’re missing is phone calls from BARRISTER THOMAS informing us about money left behind by a dead client of his. No thanks

Le Blue Dude says:

An intreging idea but...

Honestly, the internet is not economically useful in places that don’t have running water yet, or that still use barter. It’s one thing to bring universal broadband to developed countries such as India, and South Africa and Egypt and most European countries, and China… But when you start trying to bring the internet to places that lack infrastructure such as roads, and running water let alone power, internet connectivity is aiming far too high. I’d much rather make a widespread rail access, or perhaps universal pure water/universal electrical access.

iBelieve says:

Pipedream

The general populations of the world can’t be trusted on their own for the sake of their own counties’ sovereignties around the world. Setting up the great firewall is for that reason neccessary to quelch untrusted players who have anything but the most devious of plans aimed against their own governments, peoples and economies. This 550 is a pipedream. Look up at the scalar skies. Keep watching.

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