"The root of wealth or poverty lies in the ends we have in mind, not in the means to those ends. If the hand is ready then finding the instrument of action should not be difficult" -- Rabindranath Tagore
Bytes for All (B4All) is a networked space for citizens in South Asia. It experiments, highlights and organizes debate on the relevance of ICT to development activities. South Asia - often considered as an ICT powerhouse, is also the home of highest number of poor people in the World. Poverty is not just about income or GDP, its also about human development, access to better life, education, health, opportunities, empowerment and human rights. In human development index, South Asia doesn't stand brighter either. We do not create the hype that technology will solve all problem overnight. Rather we emphasize that causes to poverty are related to socio-political issues such as, un-equal distribution mode of a society, unfair trade regime, lack of good governance etc. Then what technology can do? We believe, technology can play an important role in facilitating the objectives of this socio-political solutions. Therefore when we talk about ICT solutions to poverty, we are not devoid of context and reality. We refer ICT as a process that can help achieving certain objectives more effectively, quickly and without the need of any gate keeper. To our view, ICT doesn't replace the need of good governance or people's rights to get equal opportunities, rather ICT can complement this process. When you read Bytes for All, please understand this is our spirit.
Affirming that privacy is a fundamental
human right set out in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, the
International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and other human
rights instruments and national constitutions;
Reminding the EU member countries of their obligations to enforce
the provisions of the 1995 Data Protection Directive and the 2002
Electronic Communications Directive;
Reminding other OECD member countries of their obligations to uphold the principles set out in the 1980 OECD Privacy Guidelines;

MoU on ‘Clinical Decision Support System’ signed
iRevolution
Impact of ICTs on Repressive Regimes: Findings
Posted: 13 Feb 2009 02:55 PM CST
Hi all.
Mahiti Bangalore is pleased to announce its 7th free software workshop titled Ngo in a Box from March 24-28 2009 in Madhya Pradesh,India.
This workshop is targeted at the technology professionals working in Ngo's and consultants and tech support groups who provide IT support to Ngo's and similar voluntary organizations.
Applications are now open and can be filled online at our website
regards
Rajeev Nair
Call
for Proposals for the Poster Exhibition at Science Forum
2009
Theme:
ICTs: Enabling Agricultural Science to be a Social
Endeavor
We are pleased to inform you that the 19th Skoch Summit is scheduled to be organized on January 22-23, 2009 at India Habitat Centre. Skoch Summits have matured over the past 10 years to attract not just government support but also the highest level of national and international corporate support.
A guide for Training and Planning: Working with the Media on Gender - Dear Madam/Sir, Greetings from Bangladesh NGOs Network for Radio and Communication(BNNRC). I am sending here with A guide for Training and Planning: Working [BytesforAll Readers Forum]