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| aiahrp on Wed, 15 May 2002 14:33:24 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> Net crisis in Hungary |
Hi all,
Did you know that 17 May is World Telecommunications Day? Well, it's not so
shattering I know, but the intriguing thing is what will happen in Hungary on the
same day. Net users of the nation are preparing to have a boycott of telephone
lines, including not making phonecalls or connecting to the Internet.
This is part of a campaign against a recent step of the country's major telecom
company, Matav. Its 60 percent owned by Deutsche Telecom, Matav has an
overwhelimng power in Hungarian Internet service providing market.
On 29 Arpil Matav management declared they would withdraw their flat-rate dial-
up access package from 1 July 2002, which would mean excluding a large
number of Hungarians from using the net. The flat-rate packages, largely
instrumental in spreading Internet use countrywide since 1999, were tolerable
but not cheap. A rise in the prices would bereave many homes of Internet
access, broadband connection being unaffordable for most of those who chose
dial-up service. (Also, the country's infrastructure is simply not prepared to shift
to broadband in the short term.)
Last year there was a similar situation and society's answer was the threat of a
mass demonstration. That was enough to have Matav refrain from their drastic
plan, but now there are fears that the company will carry out its plan this time.
Freshly elected socialist governing party (still waiting for inauguration), National
Association of Consumer Rights, a society of internet lawyers and other forums
expressed their dislike of Matav's decision, saying this step would set back the
development of Hungarian information society. A large number of net users are
preparing boycotts, a demonstration in the capital in front of Matav
headquarters is in the offing, and an online petition has been signed by more
than 12.000 people since 29 April.
World media has not shown much intereset in the issue, thus an English
language webpage has been set up by Hungarians, offering translations of
relevant articles from Hungarian sources: http://english.nyoc.hu/ The
contributors of the website, including me, hope that the voices of international
media and organizations might be instrumental in having Matav consider the
consequences of their decision, beyond the scope of business, at social level
too. As socialist party's minister of informatics Laszlo Madur said, <FontFamily><param>Times New Roman</param><bigger>"<FontFamily><param>Arial</param><smaller>We hope
that the telecommunications service provider, being almost in a monopolistic
position and having a profit of tens of billions of HUFs, will feel the weight of the
responsibility it has to undertake inevitably for the sake of the future of national
information society."
As an aside, Deutsche Telecom "faces EU fine for overcharging." The situation
very much looks that a national government is not a worthy opponent for a
market giant. So what can a country, like Hungary, which is not a member of
the EU, can do?
(Note: this is NOT a spam. Though, my first reaction to the event was sending
some emails of a simiar vein to media worldwide, suggesting treating the
subject in their news. Then I initiated the website and <nettime> is the only
public forum where I send this. I do not advocate the idea of an email
campaingn.)
A. B.
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