Japan launches Internet strategy

Published: 4 September 2000 y., Monday
Japan is drawing up a five-year plan to surpass the United States as an Internet powerhouse through massive investment in high-speed infrastructure and scuttling laws that inhibit e-commerce. Despite its technological prowess, high costs and a plethora of legal restrictions have prevented Japan from having its own Internet revolution - and officials are worried the new economy will pass the nation by. The government's IT Strategy Council, which opened this week under the leadership of Sony Corp. SNE president Nobuyuki Idei, said if steps are taken now the Internet could lead Japan's bruised economy into a new era of super-fast expansion. "Our country must aim to accomplish a new period of rapid economic growth by stimulating new businesses and existing industries, and overtaking the United States within five years as a major high-speed Internet nation," the council said in a report posted on the Prime Minister's office Web site. The council said it is essential to grid Japan with fiber-optic lines that will permit the high-speed transmission necessary for growth of the Internet. It was scathing in its assessment of the current state of Japan's information technology infrastructure. The council cited more than 700 legal impediments to the growth of e-commerce, including the obligatory exchange of paper documents in Internet transactions. It highlighted the urgency of immediate steps to jump-start Japan's laggard information technology industry by recommending that laws to deregulate e-commerce be debated during this fall's special session of Parliament. The government panel said it would complete its proposal of specific measures to promote the Internet in Japan within two months.
Šaltinis: AP
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 »

Microsoft Spent $100M on Trustworthy Computing

Microsoft's push to make its Windows operating system more secure cost the company more than $100 million so far this year more »

Computer Security Standards Ready

U.S. Agencies, Technology Firms Set Guidelines to Protect Against Hacking more »

Microsoft Set To Launch Windows XP Media Center

In another effort to encroach upon Apple's computer-as-entertainment strategy, Microsoft has announced its Windows XP Media Center Edition more »

Someone's Watching You: The Web's Secret Police

So far this year, the Motion Picture Association of America has sent nearly 50,000 complaints to ISPs worldwide and anticipates that number will reach 100,000 by the end of 2002 more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Baltic Utilities X

Baltic Utilities X, a software package that provides Estonian, Latvian and Lithuanian language support for computers running the new Macintosh OSX operating system, has been released by DekSoft more »

Intel 2.8GHz Pentium 4 to Ship Early

Intel Corp. is pushing up the release of a 2.8GHz Pentium 4 to this summer in hopes of boosting sagging sales of its flagship PC processor, sources close to the company say more »

The Clouds of Digital War

Will the Next Terrorist Attack Be Delivered Via Cyberspace? more »

How One Spam Leads to Another

The quantity of e-mailed advertising pitches for different opportunities is about to increase dramatically more »