e-Infrastructure and e-Services for Developing Countries. 10th EAI International Conference, AFRICOMM 2018, Dakar, Senegal, November 29-30, 2019, Proceedings

Research Article

Internet Development in Africa: A Content Use, Hosting and Distribution Perspective

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  • @INPROCEEDINGS{10.1007/978-3-030-16042-5_13,
        author={Enrico Calandro and Josiah Chavula and Amreesh Phokeer},
        title={Internet Development in Africa: A Content Use, Hosting and Distribution Perspective},
        proceedings={e-Infrastructure and e-Services for Developing Countries. 10th EAI International Conference, AFRICOMM 2018, Dakar, Senegal, November 29-30, 2019, Proceedings},
        proceedings_a={AFRICOMM},
        year={2019},
        month={3},
        keywords={Local content Web hosting Latency Peering Content infrastructure},
        doi={10.1007/978-3-030-16042-5_13}
    }
    
  • Enrico Calandro
    Josiah Chavula
    Amreesh Phokeer
    Year: 2019
    Internet Development in Africa: A Content Use, Hosting and Distribution Perspective
    AFRICOMM
    Springer
    DOI: 10.1007/978-3-030-16042-5_13
Enrico Calandro1,*, Josiah Chavula2,*, Amreesh Phokeer3,*
  • 1: Research ICT Africa
  • 2: University of Cape Town
  • 3: AFRINIC
*Contact email: ecalandro@researchictafrica.net, jchavula@cs.uct.ac.za, amreesh@afrinic.net

Abstract

Although a considerable investment in broadband infrastructure has improved broadband speeds across many African countries, the reliability and performance that users ultimately receive is determined also by the interconnection between networks and Internet Service Providers (ISPs) and by where the content, services and applications are hosted. Often, high latencies to remote destinations introduce significant performance bottlenecks, suggesting that, in addition to investments in higher throughput links, effort should be devoted to improving interconnection between ISPs and locating content closer to the users. By untangling the complexity of content access, use, hosting and distribution in Africa, this study offers three main contributions. First, it discusses challenges related to usage, hosting, distribution of local content and services in Africa, by developing a case on African local news websites. Second, it makes publicly available measurement data and indicators for local content use, hosting, and distribution across all African countries. And third, it provides points of policy recommendations on how to improve internet access and use, and infrastructure performance from a content perspective.