*Neelie Kroes, European Commissioner for the Digital agenda:
      Economic growth in Europe TEFAF ICT Business Summit Maastricht,
      The Netherlands, 12 March 2010
      <http://feedblitz.com/r.asp?l=44899851&f=1246&u=11298&c=0>*

Citation:

Digital Agenda for Europe -- how it will affect you

This Digital Agenda is effectively my slice of the Europe 2020 strategy.
It will be the work programme which I will take on with my Commission
colleagues for the next five years.

The Digital Agenda will consist of 6 key themes, which will have an
impact on your daily life -- both as businesspeople and as citizens:

*

Fast internet: this is the backbone of future business. How fast? At
speeds like 100 megabits per second, you are sending and receiving
important information quicker than you can blink your eyes.

* Digital Single Market: are you sick of it being hard to buy and sell
things across borders when you are online? We aim to end this patchwork
of national markets.

* Digital Citizenship: you need skilled workers; you want access to
online public services; you deserve protection of your rights online. My
co-ordinating role will make this a reality sooner.

* ICT research and innovation need greater priority: we don't get
amazing new technology by accident. It takes blood, sweat and tears and
it also takes money. We will mobilise and create the incentives for more
public and private R&D to support entrepreneurs throughout the
life-cycles of their innovations.

* Trust & Security: it sounds obvious, but if you don't trust technology
you are not going to use it. We are not forgetting this basic fact in
our strategy.

* Interoperability: a digital society can only take off if its different
parts and applications are interoperable and based on open platforms and
standards.

You can see my focus is concrete action. This is all about matching good
infrastructure and frameworks with your energy and ideas.

To illustrate what I mean in the context of Limburg, let me talk now
about high-speed broadband and of the high-quality internet that it will
support.

High quality internet

High-quality internet is like Digital Oxygen. For people, businesses and
public services everywhere in Europe, including Limburg.

For example, there is great work being done in here to help older people
to live independently and to monitor their health from home. Involving
the provincial authorities and several companies, this work is creating
better lives, new jobs and taxpayer savings. Full broadband coverage --
indoors and outdoors -- is crucial for bringing these ideas to life.

Limburg is in a position to be a European leader, due to its geographic
position its international outlook, excellent businesses and its world
class university. To fully exploit this potential public and private
sectors must work together to build the necessary infrastructures and
services, whilst we - at the Commission - will be making sure that
Limburg can compete on a level playing field with the rest of Europe.
This is the route to new jobs and new growth.

The special value of investing in high-quality internet is that is a
horizontal investment that lifts all sectors and productivity. Whether
it is in helping us to be energy efficient, promoting social inclusion
or driving the public sector to be more efficient -- it is amazing how
wide the impact can be.

Our quality of life is therefore directly linked to what we invest in
internet infrastructure.

At a time when companies -- especially small companies - are reluctant
or unable to build up stock and are struggling to remain competitive it
is important that they have access to the biggest possible markets, can
get their goods and services to market in the quickest possible time, at
the lowest possible price. High speed internet increases their chances
in each of these areas.

For governments facing an ageing population and problems of social
exclusion -- broadband is key. There are heavy investments to be made,
but there are also excellent returns in the long run.

So, good networks and broad coverage are fundamental pre-conditions for
getting Europe back to growth.

Many Member States' governments are currently in a state of reflection
about the challenges posed by broadband and the transition to new
high-speed broadband, and are coming up with their individual proposals.
To mention a few France Numérique 2012 and Digital Britain have put
forward their targets for broadband coverage. And the Breitbandstrategie
in Germany calls for connections of 50 Mbps to serve 75 % of the
population by 2014.

We need that national action; but we need European coordination
alongside it. That is how we will maximise benefits from the EU Single
Market, and make investments more attractive to private investors.

So the European Council's call for a unifying broadband strategy
represents an important opportunity.

Building on that, the Europe 2020 strategy for smart, sustainable and
inclusive growth makes clear that not only should there be "broadband
for all" by 2013 - by 2020 all Europeans should have access to much
higher internet speeds (30Mbps or more) and fifty percent or more of
European households should have access above 100Mbps.

There are many horizontal challenges for promoting high-speed broadband
throughout Europe:

* High-quality in addition to high-speed

* Consumers should also know real speeds, not theoretical speeds. They
feel ripped-off when they get broadband at half, or less, than the
advertised speed

* A regulatory framework that promotes private investment in next
generation networks

* Maintaining close links to regional and local authorities and prudent
use of EU budgets, which is crucial to including rural areas

* Seamless convergence between fixed and wireless is also needed in
order to deliver greater productivity. First-class wireless broadband is
vital for rural areas

* And finally -- we will not forget that the internet is most useful
when it is open, so that innovation and interoperability flourish.

But the challenges are small compared the dividend: jobs, growth and a
path out of recession.

http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/10/87&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=nl
<http://www.feedblitz.com/t2.asp?/1246/11298/0/http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/10/87&format=HTML&aged=0&language=EN&guiLanguage=nl>

-------
Cocuklarin İnternet Ortaminda Korunmasi konsudna 2 rapor:

Child Privacy Protection Online: How to Improve it Through Code and
Self-Regulatory Tools,
Federica Casarosa
<http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/cf_dev/AbsByAuth.cfm?per_id=548901>, Robert
Schuman Centre fo Advanced Studies
http://akgul.bilkent.edu.tr/Yasak/child-online-protection-SSRN-id1561570.pdf
http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1561570

Oxford Internet Institute


      Child Protection and Freedom of Speech Online: Mapping the Territory

http://www.oii.ox.ac.uk/news/?id=405

http://akgul.bilkent.edu.tr/Yasak/oii-child-protection-FD17.pdf

-----
EDRI - European Digital RIghts Avrupa Komisyonuna İnternet Yasaklari
hakkinda acik mektup yayinladi

http://http://www.edri.org/files/edri_open_letter.pdf
http://akgul.bilkent.edu.tr/edri_open_letter.pdf

---

Saygilar
Mustafa Akgul


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