I suggest the reading of the following article:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2007/08/20/nosplit/eavolt120.xml
I suggest the reading of the following article:
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/earth/main.jhtml?xml=/earth/2007/08/20/nosplit/eavolt120.xml
The state of provision of ICT courses to be provided at MCAST is really worrying.
It is quite a surprise for me to learn that there is a risk that the setting up of teaching centres which are supposed to provide ICT courses at MCAST could be delayed. One has to wonder why the tendering took place so late and why the whole issue is ending up in court.
As IT skills are strongly in demand on the employment market and the Smartcity project will be greatly in need of such skills, all efforts have to be made to assure that adequate ICT education is available for students wishing to start an IT career.
Scrap the capping In The Malta Business Weekly of the 9th October, it was revealed that the public is currently cross-subsidizing 97 companies through the energy surcharge which is levied on utility bills. Had the capping for large industries not been in place, the current surcharge rate would have been 75% instead of the current 95% according to a spokesman for the Ministry for Infrastructure, Transport and Communications. This is fact is up most upsetting. The capping for these companies should be scrapped immediately. It is absolutely not correct that private households cross-finance the electricity consumption of these 97 probably private companies and indirectly increase their profit. The 20% difference in the surcharge should be paid back to the public. Henrik Piski 10 Sqaq iz-Zenqa Qormi
“Liberalisation of telecommunications services has meant that the internet is now within reach of the 500 million people in the 27 countries of the European Union, with global means of payment, and global distribution systems.
But consumers do not yet have global commerce. Far too often they do not even have pan-European commerce.
Consumers see the internet, and the borders that exist online, and feel that they are not getting a fair deal.
There seem to be many reasons for this, some common to the online and the offline worlds, including tax systems, consumer protection laws, guarantees and after-sales service.
The Single Market of the European Union is based on a relatively straightforward premise. The fewer the barriers between markets, the more efficiently those markets will work. There are questions about territorial restrictions. It is a long standing principle of Community law that a company can prevent its distributors from actively selling across borders – this helps to protect investments and efforts made by other distributors. However a company cannot prevent arbitrage and stop its distributors selling – passively - to consumers who are themselves active, and who seek out the distributor.
Why is it possible to buy a CD from an online retailer and have it shipped to anywhere in Europe, but it is not possible to buy the same music, by the same artist, as an electronic download with similar ease? Why do pan-European services find it so difficult to get a pan-European license? Why do new, innovative services find licensing to be such a hurdle?”
Neelie Kroes, European Commissioner for Competition Policy, raised these questions in her closing speech at an Online Commerce Roundtable in Brussels on the 17th September 2008.
Unfortunately, Maltese consumers often realize that they can not get products and services delivered to Malta and that they are not able to download legally music due to licensing issues or not available online stores for the Maltese market (like Apple Store).
I fully support Mrs. Kroes initiative and hope that she will create the rules and the environment for a real European online commerce without any electronic borders and geographic restrictions.