Social Media is one of the best ways of promoting our sites and our businesses through its channels. It is also a powerful strategy that can get us links, awareness and massive amount of traffic. There’s no other low-cost promotional method that will easily give us large numbers of visitors to our website. I’m one of many to believe in the value that social media strategy can bring to our NGOs but not knowing how to use it efficiently for my organization. Thanks to LDN and Dr. Marlyn Tadros’s expertise, I had the precious opportunity to acquire more knowledge about Social Media strategies. Thank you!

May Zaidan, Communication Manager - Injaz Lebanon, Member of Junior Achievement Worldwide.
2010

M. Tadros - member of

An initiative of the UN Alliance of Civilizations

IFAP report on global ICT policies - Current Report

Or How Future ICT Trends will affect ICT4D

Marlyn Tadros

UNESCO’s Information for All Program issued a report entitled IFAP World Report 2009, written by the Information Society Research Institute of the Budapest University of Technology and Economics.

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From IPv4 to IPv6: what will it mean for NGOs?

Marlyn Tadros, PhD

Currently the domain name system is based on IPv4 [version 4]. An IP address is based on 4 sets of digits each set ranges between 0-255. For example, the IP address for mengos.net is 69.25.72.107  where each set of number is a number between 0 and 255. Every domain name has an IP address because the term ‘domain name’ is only the text version of an IP numerical address.

If the total value is 4294967296 unique values or approximately 4.3 billion, as is clear from this formula, the numbers are therefore not infinite. Put also into consideration that the numbers that 0.0.0.0 is reserved for the default network and the address 255.255.255.255 is used for broadcasts [messages sent between all computers on a network]. Traditionally, organizations and government agencies in the United States use approximately 60 percent of the allocatable addresses leaving the entire world with less than half. It is expected that by 2011 the Internet will run out of IP addresses.

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Thoughts on A2K

Marlyn Tadros, Ph.D.

Access to knowledge is defined as the desire "to protect and enhance [expand] access to knowledge, and to facilitate the transfer of technology to developing countries." [Draft Treaty on A2K pdf] It is now a full-fledged campaign that links the issue of access to the fundamental principles of justice, freedom, and human rights. In particular, A2K deals with intellectual property rights [and WIPO] and the issue of open access to knowledge, which was a major contentious issue at the World Summit for the Information Society. It also deals with open access and the public domain, creative commons licenses and copyright laws.

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ITU report for WSIS 2010
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The ITU report released a report at WSIS 2010 entitled National e-Strategies Development: Global Status and Perspectives 2010, in Geneva, Switzerland. The report deals with several countries in the wo [ ... ]


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The Knight Commission has just issued an important report entitled Informing Communities: Sustaining Democracy in the Digital Age. The report is US-focused and is concerned with "improving the inform [ ... ]


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