EFE reports that ETECSA plans to offer home Internet connectivity in the fourth quarter of 2014. They also hinted that some mobile connectivity may be offered at that time.
The connections will use DSL, not dial up, according to Jorge Legrá, Director of Strategic Programs ETECSA.
There was no mention of the costs of the home service or the places it would be available. It is clear that Cuba's poor domestic Internet infrastructure is hampering wider usage.
Legrá also discussed the new Nauta access centers, saying that ETECSA sold about 11,000 accounts in the first 15 days they were offered. He acknowledged that prices were high and would be adjusted over time.
Legrá also gave a glimpse of the surveillance in the centers -- users must present identity documents to get online and a session can be suspended for "any violation of the standards of ethical behavior that promotes the Cuban state."
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Update 7/11/2013
The New York Times has an article on the new access centers -- anecdotes and opinion as to what they foretell.
Monday, 24 June 2013
Thursday, 20 June 2013
The Good Fairy of the Internet and her Magic Wand
Last week I attended the Index on Censorship ‘Caught in the Web’ event. I asked a question from the floor and was put on the spot by chair David Aaronovitch about David Cameron's call for the big players to do more about child porn on the internet. Answered along the lines of not really understanding what more Cameron thought they could do, given that the Internet Watch Foundation runs a list already; and needing to examine any proposals to see if they carry too high a price in terms of interference with freedom of expression.
OK as far as it went, but this is what I should have said. When politicians demand that the most visible targets (ISPs, search engines, social media platforms) should do more to stop whatever abomination is hitting today’s headlines, really they just want a good fairy of the internet to wave a magic wand and make the nastiness go away. The trouble is that the good fairy is a myth, the magic wand rubs out good stuff and the bigger the magic wand the more of the good stuff it rubs out. And the nastiness still doesn’t go away.
OK as far as it went, but this is what I should have said. When politicians demand that the most visible targets (ISPs, search engines, social media platforms) should do more to stop whatever abomination is hitting today’s headlines, really they just want a good fairy of the internet to wave a magic wand and make the nastiness go away. The trouble is that the good fairy is a myth, the magic wand rubs out good stuff and the bigger the magic wand the more of the good stuff it rubs out. And the nastiness still doesn’t go away.
Worst of all, when each has had its turn at waving the magic wand - the child protectionists, the responsible speakers, the cultural preservationists, the extreme speech purgers, the adcensors, the promoters of the public interest, the filth filterers, the religious reverents, the porn exterminators, the benevolent regulators, the upholders of community standards, the real namers, the guardians of the general good, the copyright cops, the internet safety inspectors, the privacy protectors, the departments of public harmony, the joke jailers, the moral champions, the speech cleaners and scrubbers and all the clamouring crew of prohibitionists – what then is left?
If the fundamental human right of free speech means anything, it is that we can build search engines without fear that the State will make us convert them into suppression engines.
Tuesday, 11 June 2013
Yoani online near Playa Siboney -- slow and filtered, but a start
Yoani Sánchez has written a post on her visit to Siboney, the city where the ALBA-1 undersea cable lands. Siboney was hard hit by Hurricane Sandy, destroying property, causing environmental damage and reducing toursim. Sánchez suggests that improved Internet connectivity would have been relatively cheap and helped with recovery, but that has not happened.
Sánchez visited one of the new Internet access centers in Santiago de Cuba, less than 10 miles from the Siboney landing point. The center was an air-conditioned room with four computers and an attendant, who she suspects is keeping an eye on the users.

She was able to access several blogs, but the classified ad site Revolico was blocked as were Cubaencuentro and Cubanet. She ran a speed test and saw she was getting 1.77 Mbps download and .56 Mbps upload with a ping time of 234 ms.
In spite of these discouraging observations, she concludes on a positive note -- this is a crack in the Internet wall, and it may widen.
Wednesday, 5 June 2013
Yoani Sánchez tweets from a new Internet access center
The Nuevo Herald newspaper wrote about initial experience with the new Internet centers. The say that connectivity is expensive and slow, but faster than before -- no surprises. The Herald article notes that Yoani Sánchez visited one of the centers, where she accessed her blog and the Nuevo Herald Web site and viewed an unintentionally ironic warning that others might see information you send to the Internet.
Check the photos she tweeted below.
Check the photos she tweeted below.
Saturday, 1 June 2013
Google Plus community on the Internet in Cuba
I invite you to join our Google Plus community on the Internet in Cuba.This blog is pretty much a one-way street -- I write the posts and a few people comment.
Hopefully all members of the community will post and discuss material relevant to the Internet -- technology, applications and implications -- in Cuba.
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