Joho the Blog
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April 05, 2005
This morning during the "fellows hour," we hear from Tuan Nguyen who founded Vietnam Net (English version) in 1997, an ISP and content provider. He began in 1995 by putting together computers, installing linux, etc. In 1997, the government officially permitted people to connnect to the Internet. The site now has 1.5M viewers/day. (Vietnam's population is 85M. About 5M people in Vietnam are on the Internet. About 6M have mobile phones.) The site has a newspaper license which enables its reporters to go anywhere and talk with anyone. The leaders of the party provide "guidelines" rather than ruling particular stories in or out. Mr. Nguyen also talks about some ways in which these talks and his site's actions have affected government policy. He says that the Internet is good for democracy in Vietnam, and has caused the mainstream media to become more open. The media in general have been a force for democracy, including in the fight against corruption. He points to the comments section of the site and to the ability of readers to post articles and comments — they receive about 1,000 submissions per day. They select and edit them, and post about 700/day. (His ISP services connects to a gateway that censors about .001% of web sites, mainly foreign ones critical of the government, based on the Ministry of Security's directives.) The site has a staff of 280. He is excited that his company advances people based on merit, including women. The company is profitable because of its mobile phone business; it loses money on its Internet operations. He invested in providing content to mobile phones. About 1M SMS messages go through his system every day. (It's $0.20 for a ringtone.) He concludes be expressing his excitement about how the Net is improving democracy in Vietnam, and what an exciting time this is. (Take a look at Vietnam.net's photo essay on "seeing off the Kitchen Gods." More photo galleries here, including: Boat festival, Tet, first Valentine festival.) [Technorati tags: vietnam blogs] [Technorati tags: vietnam blogs globalvoices] Posted
by D. Weinberger at April 5, 2005 12:15 PM
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Comments
I was recently on a fund-raising bicycle trip in Vietnam (chronicled on the weblog at http://www.whsiperingj.addr.com/weblog/ ), and it was amazing how easily we found Internet connectivity in "cafes" (they don't actually serve food) in even the smallest villages in the country.
These Internet spots were full of mostly young people at all hours of the day and night. Most folks were chatting it up on IM (mostly using Yahoo) and playing various PC games. Platforms were mostly PCs running Win 98. Connectivity was DSL, and available bandwidth ranged from adequate to abysmal depending on time of day. Seemed like pricing was around 50 cents per hour usually.
Posted by: Oren Sreebny | April 5, 2005 07:24 PM
I am pleased to shout that I consider Nguyen Anh Tuan one of my close Vietnamese friends. We have known one another for over six years and I first interviewed him in his spartan office in Hanoi. He is indeed championing digital media and as a result, forcing the government to re-examine its selective controls placed on the media.
Tuan, represents the new face of Vietnam. He is the next generation embracing the available technology to create a better society in Vietnam. A society and culture that is informed and yes, also entertained. His cable news show styled after Larry King, has proven to quite popular.
Look for more from this artuculate and charismatic media leader as he continues to harness the latest media technologies for his new digital nation.
James Borton
Posted by: James Borton | April 13, 2005 03:43 PM