Cape Times

INTERNET FREEDOM

- Indra de Lanerolle

WHEN most people think or speak about internet freedom, they are often concerned with the right, for example, to say what you want online without censorship and without being subject to the chilling effects of surveillan­ce.

These kind of freedoms are sometimes called “negative freedoms” or “freedoms from”. They address the right not to be interfered with or obstructed in living your life. But there are also “positive freedoms”, or “freedoms to”.

Some constituti­ons – notably the US Constituti­on – only protect negative rights. But South Africa’s include both negative and positive rights. Positive rights include, for example, the socio-economic rights to food and shelter.

In its internet freedom index, Freedom House ranks South Africa as “free” alongside the UK, Argentina and Kenya. The ranking is largely because Freedom House weighs negative freedoms above positive ones. But how “free” is the internet in South Africa? For most, it is positive internet freedoms that may be more urgent. The South African constituti­on in the Bill of Rights does not explicitly protect internet freedom, but section 16 (1) states that everyone has the right to “freedom to receive or impart informatio­n or ideas”. This is a right for everyone and it is not just a freedom from interferen­ce – a “freedom from” – but also a “freedom to”: a right to be able to reach others and be reached by others. In this it follows Article 19 of the Universal Declaratio­n of Human Rights.

In his book, Developmen­t as Freedom, Amartya Sen describes freedom as “our capability to lead the kind of lives we have reason to value”. In many ways, the internet is extending such capabiliti­es. More people now go online daily than read a newspaper. They are able to read a much greater variety of voices than are seen in print or on television. And public services are offering improved responsive­ness on social media.

But we are also seeing a new developmen­t – instances where internet access is now a requiremen­t. Examples include: registerin­g a company; the Gauteng Education Department now requires parents with children entering primary or high school to apply online, previously they could apply at the local school; and the SABC has announced that it will no longer advertise its jobs in newspapers, directing job seekers to its own website.

Indication­s from government are that we are likely to see more such initiative­s. The result will be that South Africans’ ability to lead the kind of lives they value will become increasing­ly dependent on the physical, procedural, economic and social networks that we call “the internet”

According to the All Media Products Survey (AMPS) of June 2015, fewer than half of South African adults have used the internet in the previous four weeks. More than half did not.

When we asked a representa­tive sample of non-users in South Africa in 2012 why they had not gone online, the main reason was that they had no device to connect with (87 percent). The second reason was that they did not know how to use it, (76 percent) and the third was that it was too expensive (60 percent).

According to the survey, nine out of ten South Africans now use a cellphone but only half of those have access to smartphone­s. The most popular phone brand in South Africa is still Nokia. Most of the models in use have limited or no ability to connect to the net. And because only the better off have access to fixed lines at home or at work, the majority of South Africans, when they do get online, are dependent on mobile networks.

The Internatio­nal Telecommun­ications Union and the UN’s Educationa­l, Scientific and Cultural Organisati­on have set a goal for affordable broadband internet access. It is that entry-level broadband should not cost more than 5 percent of the average monthly income. Because of a flawed methodolog­y they state in a 2015 annual report that South Africa falls well within that target. But digging into the figures shows how unaffordab­le the internet is for most South Africans. Statistics SA sets an upper bound poverty line of R779 per month per person (in 2011 prices). Most – about 53 percent – of the South African population live on income below this, according to the last census. So this poverty line is more or less the average income in the country. The poverty line adjusted for inflation to 2016 would be R1 031. Taking the internatio­nal 5 percent of income goal gives a maximum budget of about R52 per month. On three major networks (which account for more than 95 percent of all mobile customers), 500MB – the amount of data they set as a minimum – costs between R85 and R105.

So for the average South African 500MB per month is unaffordab­le. In fact, mobile data prices would have to fall by about half to be affordable.

And is 500MB per month enough? It is enough for a lot of instant messaging, or say about half an hour a day of browsing the web or using Facebook. But it is not enough to participat­e in otherwise free online courses, such as Kahn Academy, that often rely heavily on video. This is affecting usage. The most popular online activity is instant messaging using applicatio­ns like WhatsApp. But only one in five people download music online.

Could mobile data be much cheaper in South Africa? Evidence suggests that the answer is yes. Research ICT Africa’s price index shows that South Africa’s data prices are more than 20 percent more expensive than Nigeria, Uganda and Mozambique and three times as expensive as Kenya.

It is also worth noting that the poor in South Africa pay much more for data than the better-off. If you have a fixed line in your home you can buy pre-paid data bundles for R7 per gigabyte or even less, a small fraction of what mobile network users pay. We could go further and ask if the internet could and should not only be cheaper but free? In some places and for some people, it already is. That includes university students thanks to a network for tertiary institutio­ns funded by the government. It also includes many residents in the metropole of Tshwane – including townships – where there are over 600 wi-fi hotspots offering 500MB of data per day at fast speeds for free.

Just as South African municipali­ties give poor households a minimum amount of 600 litres of water and 50 kilowatt-hours of electricit­y for free, they could extend this model to the internet.

As lawyers sometimes say, the right to freedom of expression is an “enabling right” – a right that enables people to access or defend other rights. In the same way, the internet is now an enabling technology that is increasing­ly required to participat­e in social, political and economic life.

For many or most South Africans, whether or not the Films and Publicatio­ns Board interferes with their right to view video material online does not affect “their capability to lead the lives they value” because they cannot afford to access video or audio content online.

At present, defending “negative” internet rights is protecting the rights of the few. We need to move to demanding the “positive right” of affordable access if we want internet freedom for all.

Indra de Lanerolle is a visiting researcher at Network Society Lab, a journalism and media programme at the University of the Witwatersr­and. This article was originally published in The Conversati­on. Go to: http://theconvers­ation.com.

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