Patrice Riemens on Fri, 28 May 1999 16:46:30 +0200 (CEST) |
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nettime-nl: GoaNet interviewt XS4ALL'er Ray Selby |
Dit stuk is in het Engels (komt uit Goa), maar gaat wel over een Amsterdammer en ons eigen access for all! ----- Forwarded message from goanet-digest ----- goanet-digest Wednesday, May 26 1999 Volume 01 : Number 1444 ----------------------------------------------------------------------------- In this issue: Internet Evangelist: Ray Selby ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Thu, 27 May 1999 00:52:54 +0500 From: Frederick Noronha <fred@goa1.dot.net.in> Subject: Internet Evangelist: Ray Selby ################################################################# CyberIdealist: Ex-Hippy Ray Selby is now an Internet Evangelist ################################################################# By Frederick Noronha Ray Selby was a hippy for 15 years in Goa. In his life-after- Asia, he became a customer, an employee and then a senior programmer at the Dutch alternative Internet service provider, called XS4ALL. Today, he's an evangelist for the Internet. Selby strongly feels that access to communication to the commonman would make a world of a difference. Specially to places like Goa. Easy access to the Internet to everybody would make it easier to fight injustice, corruption and violence, says he. "Winston Churchill once said, 'Jaw, jaw is better than war, war'. As soon as we start talking to each other, as soon as the entire world knows what is going on...then and only then will such negative forces be stopped," says he optimistically. It's obvious he feels strongly on this point. Says he: "If there's anything I personally can do to help to get access to everybody in India... I would like to see every rickshaw-walla in Bombay, every man on the beach in Goa, every sadhu-baba in the North, to be able to access the Internet." But first let's begin at the beginning. How did Selby get involved with cyberspace? XS4ALL is an interesting story. It aim is, what it's name says: providing access for all. It was founded by individuals working on a hackers' magazine called Hack-Tic. They were all on the Internet on the early days before it was public. So, five years ago, they decided to start giving Internet access to ordinary people -- just as it's happening now in India. What makes XS4ALL so different from all the many Internet Service Providers (ISPs) offering cyberconnections at a price? "Now we are also famous for being the quality Internet service provider. We're not particularly cheap; we're also not expensive. But what we do is we give quality to people who are really into the Internet. Rather than the average man who just wants to send some email and browse the web," says Selby. Two things make XS4ALL different from all other ISPs. "One is that we are activist. We stand for many, many really good causes. To give freedom of speech to people in the world," said Selby, during a recent visit to Goa. For instance when a radio station in Yugoslavia was closed down, they wrote in to XS4ALL for help. The reply was: "We have 35 people at your disposal. What do you want us to do?" One day later a real audio server was up. This allows you to put up radio-type broadcasts via the Internet bypassing all censorship and controls. XS4ALL also helps activists in other ways. Every four years they have a big, big festival in which everybody can come and get free 24 hour Internet access. They get such connections in their tent or their caravan. Links are established with people in other parts of the globe, through cyberspace. But is such optimism justified in these parts of the globe? Isn't costs of the Internet still prohibitively costly in the Third World? Buying a computer, phone-line, modem and Internet account still could take upto one year's salary for an average middle-class person. "The most important thing is independent service providers. If the monopoly situation is not broken, access to everyone will never become a reality," says Selby, refusing to let his optimism sag. And then, everyone need not have a computer at home. Maybe they could go to the post office, and pay five or ten rupees and send some emails, browse the web, enter any chat group. So they could tell the world what they have to say. This is Selby's solution to fighting the cost-barrier that has blocked free communication. But, anyway, isn't the Internet still a luxury for a country like India? What comes first? Cyberaccess, classrooms, basic health care, or a full stomach? Selby is not deterred by this argument either. In time, access is going to come through for millions. It is not a question of having to choose between cyberspace or basic necessities. In fact, as experience is already showing, cyberspace could make it easier for people to rise to their potential or meet basic needs. In a place like Goa, luxury hotels and business quarters are already using the Internet. "It's only the government and the class-system which would like to stop it, so as to maintain the status quo. But it's already there, they can't stop it," avers Selby. What about the view that the Internet could further widen the gap between information rich and info-poor? Selby argues that the Internet should not be made into a luxury good. It must be a mass medium for everybody who wants it. Ordinary people can make web sites. Software-editor programs today make it simple enough for even non-technical persons to put out their own sites. "That opens enormous possibilities (in terms of communication possibilities)," says he. Says Selby: "Three years back, we had the same problems you'll have here. Internet was costly. Connectivity wasn't so good. Now, new technologies are coming in -- Internet can come in via cable. When we have fast bandwith, life becomes completely different." Post offices, public libraries, even schools need access to Internet. As the prices keep going down slowly, as earlier generation equipment could be passed down to those who can't afford. "We're talking about a period of say five years," says Selby. In that time, a lot could change in ways we can't even conceive of now. "Five years ago, there was nothing in Holland. Really nothing. When I browsed the web five years ago, there was nothing interesting there. I was on news-groups and the email," says he. Today almost anybody in Holland can access the Internet. Through their railway stations. Every airport. There are publicphone-type email booths. Facilities can also be shared within communities. Don't governments fear empowering citizens? It's too late, says Selby. Governments have set the genie free. Five years ago, the governments in the West began talking about censoring and stopping the Internet. It was already too late by then. "There's already too much money floating around... they can't stop the Internet." And, finally, what has happened to XS4ALL? "We simply won the fight," as Selby puts it. Internet has really proliferated in Holland. Just like one walks up to a phone booth, Amsterdam offers public Internet kiosks, where one can easily go up and check one's email. Or surf the 'Net. Says he proudly: "We have 60,000 subscribers in Holland and Belgium. We now employ 110 people. Every single year since we started we almost doubled our size. Everybody in Holland knows we are the best. All the power-users know that." "We have the best relay-chat server in Holland, we have the best server in Europe practically for news groups, we have a real audio server to give freedom of speech to the Yugoslavs," says Selby. Some months back, the telecom company in Holland bought up XS4ALL. "They wanted quality, so they bought us," says he. "We fight the fight in Europe. Somebody has to fight the fight in India. We can improve things through talking. And the best way of talking is through the Internet," says he. Ray Selby's prescription is: "When you find injustice, tell the world. They will stop. They cannot go on in the face of the world." (ENDS) ----- End of forwarded message from goanet-digest ----- ----- End of forwarded message from Patrice Riemens ----- -- * Verspreid via nettime-nl. Commercieel gebruik niet toegestaan zonder * toestemming. <nettime-nl> is een gesloten en gemodereerde mailinglist * over net-kritiek. Meer info: list@dds.nl met 'info nettime-nl' in de * tekst v/d email. Archief: http://www.factory.org/nettime-nl. Contact: * nettime-nl-owner@dds.nl. Int. editie: http://www.desk.nl/~nettime.