Hey Joe

The media is a necessary evil that has been used to achieve particular 
objectives both good and bad.  I have no problem with any media coverage that 
furthers the good of AfriNIC and the internet as a whole.

Over the 13 years of AfriNIC we have achieved so much, impacted so many lives 
and seen the continent change in so many ways.  AfriNIC has carried out so many 
outreach trainings.  I remember when I Sudan where I walked in a class that had 
more women than Men all amazingly good networking professionals.  And I have 
seen very limited media coverage.

  The few times that this same media house has focused on AfriNIC is on the 
negative if not concoted stories.

 
I think we should be ready to call this out when we see it.  

Badru





On 4/13/17, 5:37 PM, "Joe Abley" <[email protected]> wrote:

Hi Badru,

I have no standing (at least in my own mind) to have an opinion on this 
proposal; that would be a matter for Africans, and I'm merely an enthusiastic 
and occasional visitor.

However, I found Kieran's article to be pretty balanced and accurate. He 
summarised the intent well, he went out of his way to say that this is just a 
proposal, and he didn't make any outrageous claims about the practical impact 
that any policy action by AfriNIC could have. His characterisation of techies 
vs. government matches the spirit of a lot of the comments I've seen on this 
list (and it's a hook that tends to resonate well with the libertarian 
readership of that web site).

The comments from readers that follow the story in the register are another 
matter, however. They demonstrate a pronounced lack of technical understanding 
of what AfriNIC is, what its responsibilities are and what its impact is. There 
are suggestions that AfriNIC can shut down parts of the Internet by revoking 
access to address blocks and that declining to allocate new blocks could knock 
end-users off-line, for example, neither of which are particularly accurate.

Once again, setting aside the merits of the proposal itself, I think there's an 
opportunity here while at least one minor eye of the press is looking in this 
direction to clarify some of these points and take advantage of the educational 
opportunity. I don't think it's particularly useful to deal with reactions in 
the press by being annoyed that they have happened; better I think to assume 
that they will continue and to have a plan for that eventuality.

Regardless of the outcome of the policy process it would be nice to think that 
a side effect was at least that some people come away with a better 
understanding of what AfriNIC does. That's surely something that everybody can 
agree with.


Joe

On 13 Apr 2017, at 10:21, Badru Ntege <[email protected]> wrote:

Arsene

The community should be wary not to be played.


On 4/13/17, 3:59 PM, "Arsène Tungali" <[email protected]> wrote:
Just read the article on theregistry.co.uk, a UK mainstream media, while no 
African newspaper thought of publishing it (or are they even aware of the 
ongoing discussion?) I simply love it and the way they put it. Anyone who is 
not familiar with this process will think it is something the AFRINIC Board is 
working on, rather than a simple proposal put forward by three community 
members (even if authors were mentioned as well).
Not wanting to point any connections is this not the same media house that 
published a private email to discredit a member of the community not long ago. 
??

And again this is the same media house that has historically published 
information about AfriNIC where a certain member of the community is 
involved…..just saying




In my opinion, authors of this article made it sound like a warning to African 
governments, that Afrinic is working on a policy that will punish them if they 
dare shutting down the Internet; which is beautiful! I am sure if some 
governments read it, their impression (or trust) on afrinic will start to be 
altered (as many people have pointed out on this list). 
This surely is something for the governance committee to look into.  
 
A touch of “Tilapia” arround this whole policy proposal.  


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