Japan Outlines Five-Year 'E-Strategy'

Published: 6 April 2001 y., Friday
The plan, called the "E-Japan Priority Policy Program", consists of more than 200 government actions, categorized into five functional policy areas and four cross-cutting issues, each of which has a concrete time line and target, the government said in an official statement from the Information Technology Policy Office. The program is calculated to establish an environment in which the private sector can exert its full potential, the statement said. The authorities outlined a time-line which calls for the introduction of asymmetrical regulations and an incentive-based competition policy, the establishment of a "Telecom Conflict Resolution Committee," strengthening functions of the FTC by drafting guidelines under the Antimonopoly Act, the establishment of a system to encourage the use of existing optical fibers and network-related resources such as poles and conduits, expanding the radio frequency spectrum for high-speed wireless access, all within the current year. Also slated for 2001 is promotion of education and development of human resources, Internet access from all public schools, familiarization of all public school teachers with PCs, IT basic skill lessons for 5.5 million adults, and more flexibility in university curriculum. This year will also see the preparation of a legal basis on electronic contracts, contracts on information properties and ISPs' responsibilities. In 2002, the plan calls for digitized government and standardized cryptographic technologies. By 2003, the government said it hopes to deliver all laws and white papers via the Web and prepare online systems for substantially all the procedures of application and reporting. The statement also said that government officials will cooperate with the Council for Science and Technology Policy for the promotion of R&D, improve the digital divide due to geographical, age, physical constraints, and contribute to the international standardization of rules and specifications, and the dissolution of the global digital divide.
Šaltinis: Newsbytes.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Mapping the New Internet

Expert says it will take a new attitude to squash spam, wire your washer, and identify the next IM more »

A Linux Desktop Bonanza

Linux desktop vendors Xandros and Linspire (also known as Lindows) are offering more desktop software for less, and, in the case of Xandros, for nothing more »

Traditional School Moves to the Internet

Penki kontinentai” implements the first unique project of electronic school in Lithuania. This project must change collaboration between teachers and students improve expedition, information search and change such a negative view of school in general.

more »

Windows 'Lock-In' Worries

Microsoft Corp.'s plans for a common set of services that promise its server platform products will work better together are being met with skepticism. more »

New Prescott Pentium 4 processors on tap from Intel

Among the eight new chips will be Intel's first workstation processors with 64-bit extensions technology more »

The Changing Face of E-Mail

Information overload will drive e-mail into the ground unless software vendors act now and make major changes to the 30-year-old technology more »

AMD Refreshes Athlon 64 CPUs

Four 64-bit chips with fast cache join Athlon family. more »

Sony to exit key handheld arenas

Sony is scaling back its Clie handheld line and will bow out of the U.S. and European markets for PDAs more »

CeBIT America means business

In its second year, show improves in size and focus more »