Saturday, December 20, 2008

Toolbox * Permalink * * Discuss this Article(45) * Next Article in this Section Café owners seek ‘free and fair’ internet BY Staff

Café owners seek ‘free and fair’ internet

– may take legal action

The Internet Interest Holders Group (IIHG), at a meeting held by the group yesterday, which was opened to all interested parties, said it was focusing its efforts at securing “free and fair internet”.

The IIHG, a body of internet café owners and managers which was formed following the Guyana Revenue Autho-rity (GRA) announcement that it will pursue and prosecute business that offer international telephone calls over the internet since it was “illegal”, and the Guyana Tele-phone and Telegraph (GT&T) company’s blocking of some software used to make international calls through the internet.

Thus far, at least one internet café owner has been forced to layoff staff.

The main argument of the group is that the ban on Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) and Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) is illegal because the various internet café owners are paying GT&T for a service and not part of a service.

According to Head of the IIHG, Stephen Thompson, the body is seriously considering taking legal action against the telephone company. He said it was seeking to have an injunction against the company which will prevent it from continuing to block the VOIPs and the VPNs sites, until the mater is resolved in court. With this in mind, the IIHG has sought legal representation from the Fraser and Housty Law Firm. He said the group would also appeal to the authorities to have an amendment to the bill that covers communication in the country.

Speaking at yesterday’s meeting, Attorney-at-law Stephen Fraser pointed out that GT&T had no legal right over the internet service in Guyana, since it was never granted such right by the Public Utilities Commission (PUC).

However, Fraser said, internet cafés were in a difficult position, since apart from being targeted by GT&T, they were also being threatened by the National Frequency Management Unit and the GRA. With three agencies posing a threat, he said, the body had to make decisions that were in the best interest of all concerned and to think seriously about all the available options.

It was mentioned that GT&T had made an offer to internet café owners, which involved them paying US$60 for a “box”, a $10,000 monthly rental for DSL and buying minutes from GT&T to continue to use VOIP, but it is not clear whether the IIHG will accept this offer.

Meanwhile, Fraser said that when it came to the GRA, it was the responsibility of the internet café owners to pay value-added tax (VAT) once they crossed the $10 million income threshold.

Thompson himself called on the café owners to pay their taxes. However, it was suggested by some during the discussions that it was the GRA, which was responsible for collecting taxes and should implement measures to ensure that persons paid their taxes.

However, Fraser emphasized that the effort was always required from the person paying the taxes.

Meanwhile, Mark Court who was attributed with pioneering the concept of internet cafés in Guyana, said these cafes have been in existence for 12 years and he found it strange that suddenly there was an attempt to close them down.

Lost business
When contacted last week, some internet café managers indicated that to some extent, their operations had been affected. Based on telephone interviews with several managers, it has been noted that those who access the internet through a wireless system have not been affected while those who have dial-up or DSL have been affected.

Shaurwayne Blackman, the owner of Action Tek Internet Café said he had been affected “everyway possible”. He said certain sites like Net2phone have been blocked and have been “on and off” preventing the use of the site. He asserted that persons who went to browse the internet at his cafe have also been affected as at times the pages load very slowly. The internet café owner, who has been in business for the past five years, said that the situation was frustrating to customers and he has lost business. “It’s been rough,” he stated adding that he had had to lay off two employees.

He said internet cafes owners would not mind putting their businesses “straight” but a tax rate lower than the 16% VAT rate would be preferred. He said that for the past three weeks there had been a degradation of service but since he also has a wireless system certain operations were not affected much. He emphasized that if the situation continued he would have to reduce the hours worked and consequently the salaries paid to the remaining staff members. He pointed out that every year, he pays income tax.

Stephen Thompson of Netsurf.com said he has been on a virtual shutdown since he was unable to offer calls from both of his locations. He stated that access was blocked to websites where software to allow voice communication was sourced. But browsing was not affected though he stated that he had to reduce his staff while attempts are made to resolve the issue. He declared that his staff were committed to the café and it was hard to have the situation impacting on them. He said that a “grace period” should have been allowed while attempts were made to sort out the issues. Thompson was in the internet café business since 2000.

Another internet café manager, who requested anonymity said that the café had sold cards, through which call could be made at home and persons had complained that they were unable to use them since sites like Mediaring were blocked.

Wireless unaffected
Attempts during the course of last week to get a comment from GT&T Director of Rate Making, Gene Evelyn were futile while the company’s spokeswoman, Allison Parker said she could not speak without consulting senior officials.

Meantime, other internet cafes that utilize a wireless system said they were not affected while several others, which do not offer calls, were also not affected.

Meantime, according to the ‘Current System Status’ on the website of internet service provider, Inter.Net.Works, in an entry posted on December 2, it was stated that GTT had blocked all VOIP (through which calls are made) traffic on its network as of 3 pm that day and the company had been advised that the network policy was implemented based on a GRA policy on lost revenue from VOIP calls. Another entry posted later that day said that GTT had advised that the network policy on VOIP calls should not affect peer-to-peer messenger applications and the policy is intended to disallow calls to international numbers.

The following day, another post said the telephone company had advised that the current network policy on VOIP calls is similar to the current policy for DSL. All VOIP applications are explicitly blocked while peer-to-peer messenger services are not explicitly blocked. Blocked services are disallowed in-transit when the traffic traverses GTT’s data platform, the post said.

The last entry, on December 4 stated that GT&Ts current block on VOIP calls has not been revised and noted that the company’s technical department had successfully tested some mainstream PC to PC applications including Yahoo Messenger, MSN Messenger and Skype, which are not included on the GT&T’s blocked list and found them to be working. Well established PC to phone applications such as Net2phone and Mediaring remain blocked and do not work, the entry had stated.

The IIHG had, in a statement, said that it will comply with any reasonable taxation imposed on businesses and warned that the blocking of internet calls will severely affect over 7,000 persons. It had appealed to the government to make the necessary adjustments to resolve the issue “so as to ensure stability in this sector” and asserted that in previous instances, the government ruled in favour of services like Mediaring and Dialpad signalling their interest in innovation in the telecommunications sector.

The statement had declared that the restrictions and limitations on the use of these services is a blatant attack on the rights of citizens to the use of the internet. It asserted that the telephone company’s blocking of VOIP’s and VPN’s implies aggressively that the company’s services must be used to make international calls which happens to be more expensive and said that the service and rates of the GT&T can be much better.

The GRA, in a statement late last month had said that a large number of persons and entities have become illegally involved in the international telephone call business and the entity is moving to prosecute them. “These individuals and businesses have essentially created illegal telecommunications networks that employ authorized VSAT equipment for unlawful purposes or VSAT equipment without the requisite licenses, SIM banks, broadband, Virtual Private Networks (VPNs) and international Voice Over Internet Protocol (VOIP) providers like Vonage, Skype, and Packet 8 to offer outbound and inbound voice calls to the public for a fee. These operations are illegitimate and essentially result in tax evasion since no revenue is paid on these calls,” the GRA had declared.

It had said that such operations are increasing rapidly and its calculations indicate that their collective impact on the national revenue collection effort is too significant to ignore. Government has supported the revenue body and urged the entity to aggressively pursue the tax evaders and enforce the law.

Comments

About Comments



The Comments section of this website is intended to provide a forum for reasoned and reasonable debate on the newspaper's content and is an extension of the newspaper and what it has become well known for over its history: accuracy, balance and fairness.

We reserve the right to edit/delete comments which contain attacks on other users, slander, coarse language and profanity, and gratuitous and incendiary references to race and ethnicity.

Curious about the little images next to each commenter's name ? Go here and sign up using the same email address you used to register for Stabroeknews.com then upload your image and confirm it.

45 Comments
  1. Bad News UNITED STATES says:
    The sweet tax free system is over for all involved for years now it was a free ride what if you have to pay? those people employed by the internet cafe do they have nis benefit it is time the young people in Guyana understand the importance of NIS too many will put labour in for nothing later.
    • SandHurst First GUYANA says:
      The sticker the government the wiser the population…Watch and see (oh shucks u in America) how many people with use a back door and make their calls…..remember its the internet we talking about here!!
    • Hey “Bad News”! Re: “[...those people employed by the internet cafe do they have NIS benefit it is time the young people in Guyana understand the importance of NIS too many will put labour in for nothing later...]” How come there is now emphasis on the “importance of the NIS” (a sister organization of the now defunct Guyana Cooperative Agricultural and Industrial Development Bank - GAIBANK; and, an financial institution that was established by the L. F. S. Burnham Administration) and the values of the Guyana Cooperative Cooperative Agricultural and Industrial Development Bank - GAIBANK were not recognized in terms of creating employment for people such as those working at these “Internet Cafes’” in Guyana. The question is: Is it that more “NIS” money is needed for the completion of the “Berbice River Bridge” or what… so much so that it is now necessary to go after these “Internet Cafe’ Owners”! How about the Guyana Government’s GRA going after the “Hire Cars and Mini-Bus Owners for Taxes and NIS payments - They have been around decades before the “Internet Cafes’”?
    • Joe Coxall UNITED STATES says:
      Bad News,
      The internet and all of its pheriferals, remain and should remain, the peoples free access of communication. If we allow them to tax and control it. eventually you will have to pay for every text word you present on this site and anywhere else.

      Give the desperately poor people a break, it is their only affordable means of communication, they are already taxing the overseas remittances, how can they again tax the communication pathways, that allow that remittance.

      I remember when calls to Guyana would cost 700 to 1000 thousand dollars US per month, if you were not careful. With the internet those sums now go to the family instead of to the phone company.

      I remember when all calls from Guyana were collect, because your poor family could not afford the call and you either took the call or not, because you are first thinking about your telephone bill.

      Your family wanted a smallpiece but could not afford to call, you do not mind the smallpiece, but the tele call was more than the small piece.

      So I say live and let live, give the people a break, you blood suckers.

      Joe.

    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      Hey Bad News, are you talking about the same NIS who didn’t pay out benefits to a certain judge and a certain newspaper editor after decades of service to our country. The same NIS who sits by while employees of certain government agencies doesn’t receive medical benefits in the ‘here and now’. Please we here on the ground in GT can’t worry about NIS when we get old if we still trying to survive on a daily basis in the ‘here and now’
  2. RDMAN UNITED KINGDOM says:
    Complete nonsense,with 16%vat and the phone bill are already high.Guyana has one of the highest rates per minute in the world,imagine the rates of Afghanistan is lower than Guyana.
  3. It is time for someone to start acting right. GT&T has long been riding the monopoly horse and has finally gotten their way through policies from GRA. I agree with Mr. Thompson that some Internet Cafe indeed get off Taxes and I think that GRA should have moved towards educating Cafe owners on how to implement Tax programs so that all can benefit.

    Stopping VOIP is a sign of dictatorship, something that was done many years ago. Blocking of VOIP is the same as banning commodities such as food items etc. It works the same way.

    So there is some amount of wrong on both sides of the fence, but GT&T takes the greater chunk of the doings. It is time that they start acting right. We need to realise that stopping technological advancements is sometime that cannot be achieved. GT&T’s only concern seems to be their loss of income, not the poorer class and the people who are employed and are suffering. I, personally know of a single mom who works at a Cafe to support her daughter to going to school. How is she going to be able to maintain her child now that Business is closed by someone due to their greed.

    I invite you to vote against this tyranny: http://freegyvoip.wordpress.com

  4. tom CANADA says:
    why it is so expensive to call only Guyana from North America and else where?
    • It is expensive to call worldwide. GT&T charges up GY$1000(US$5) per minute to call some parts of the world. It is among one of the cheapest rates they charge to call USA and Canada.
  5. Mackydog UNITED STATES says:
    Render on to Caesar what belongs to Caesar.

    How else can the Government provide for the country if taxes aren’t collected? Some businessmen want to continue the old time tradition practiced during the PNC ERROR by operating businesses and NOT paying revenue making all the money and contributing nothing back to the people who support their businesses.

    It’s time the Government (IRD) create laws to have all businesses large and small, even bottom-house cake shops operating in Guyana display a Government issued Permit To Operate, and if they don’t have one, be prosecuted and closed down. Businesses in Guyana have it too damn easy. The worst thing Guyanese businessmen hate is CHANGE.

    RENDER ON TO CAESAR WHAT BELONG TO CAESAR.

    • Hey “Mackydog”! Re: “How else can the Government provide for the country if taxes aren’t collected? How about telling us how much taxes were paid to the Guyanese treasury by the large foreign-owned gold mining, timber extraction… companies that were (are) operating in Guyana; and, the bauxite industries “not being start-up companies”… how much taxes will be paid into the Guyanese treasury by the majority-owned Russian and Chinese companies; also, when will the “tax holidays” granted to these companies (which are raping the Guyanese economy) be over! These are the real tax issues that you should be talking about here - don’t you think!
    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      Mackydog, I don’t think this is about paying revenue to the GRA, if that was the case GRA has avenues to ensure they get theirs. I don’t believe most of these cafe’s would make 10 million plus a year and as such would avoid VAT. But income taxes is a must- if they aren’t paying the GRA can legally go after them. These businesses are not underground, they’re in the open. I think this is about GTT continuing to maintain their monopoly at the same time repressing its customers. Thank god for Digicel who opened our eyes and finally gave us the way to utilize a cell phone instead of having it as an accessory.
  6. i remembered when i got my first internet, dial-up, i said “ah ha i going & call some me relatives overseas” now that’s over and done with and i fed-up browsing and ebuddy on the phone works great, the internet is useless to me now.
    someone should investigate whose money is funding GRA upcoming staff party.
  7. ALI GUYANA says:
    i have already make a comment few days ago

    internet cafes must register their business and pay they income taxes and a yearly licence fee to operate or a yearly fee to gt&t for yap jack users
    for a fact the yapjack providers are killing the internet cafes business and internet cafes have alot of overhead expencives
    these things need to be regulated not every corner their a call center,

    one more thing if gt&t can give us deal on weekends eg; calls to usa & canada for $20gd per minutes, gt&t would find their revanue incresing

    please forgive me if i offended anyone…

    regards
    ALI

    • Hey “ALI”! You have said inter alia; “[...I have already make a comment few days ago

      internet cafes must register their business and pay they income taxes and a yearly licence fee to operate or a yearly fee to gt&t for yap jack users for a fact the yapjack providers are killing the internet cafes business and internet cafes have alot of overhead (expenses) these things need to be regulated not every corner their a call center...]”

      Also,

      Re: “The Federal Communications Commission has canceled a meeting scheduled at which it planned to vote on a controversial free Internet plan”

      http://news.cnet.com/8301-1035_3-10122586-94.html?tag=newsEditorsPicksArea.0

      There are others in the world who are thinking differently than the way you are thinking; and, you need to wake up and smell the coffee - The best things in life are free.

    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      I agree, GTT should have been smart and got in the game early, be a leader not a petty follower. Push for regulation of the industry and offer competitive rates. The cafes have to register every year and renew their business license which is a ‘cakewalk process’. its so easy I don’t see why anyone wouldnt be registered to run their business in GT. And that brings to mind how crazy it is that GTT/GRA and the media would repeately say that these are illegal businesses when they would have been legally registered by the government through the Registrar’s.
  8. Deryck UNITED STATES says:
    The government is right to corral the internet cowbows. These “businesses” use infrastructure that they have not invested in and therefore need to pay a licence to operate the businesses. Whay is the right of the Cafe owner to use Gt&T’s systems to offer servises that undercuts GT & T ’s revenues. Besides, it is only by implementing a moniotoring mechanisn to quantify the numebr of calls made/minutes used that the revenues can be properly taxed for VAT and the entreprenuers pay proper Income Tax as they should.
    • How do you know that “It Is (Not) All About (errr…Jobs-Jobs-Jobs) Economy - Stupid!”
    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      Deryck are you kidding me Deryck, “These “businesses” use infrastructure that they have not invested in”, what are you talking about. Are you calling the internet an infrastructure, you sure cant be because its not. The cafe’s are paying for the use of the dsl/dialups they don’t access it for free, they are paying for that infrastructure that get invested in. And believe me the dsl is not lighting speed as GET advertises, I think they should spend their time and money improving on that. When the dsl/dialups go down, GET almost never offers an explanation we just have to tek whatever they dish out and you know what else we don’t get a prorated bill either for the days or hours they would have been down. The problem is GET didn’t not foresee the many benefits of the internet and dropped the ball a long time ago.
  9. Unknow GUYANA says:
    GTT doing the right thing cafe need to pay up too.
    • Hey “Unknow”! Orion or Digicel BlackBerry’s “Bold” To The Left And Right and GT&T In The Middle; and, “You” Can Have What Ever You Like!

      http://na.blackberry.com/eng/purchase/

      :-$ ;-) :-$

    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      Dear Unknow, you need to go back to wearing your cell phone as an accessory if you had one, keep enjoying waiting 10 years or more for a land line, stay without credit in your cell phone because its too expensive to topup and only speak to your relatives abroad at christmas or on specail occasions instead of everyday. While the rest of us go to the internet cafe’s and keep in touch with our loved ones abroadm get our support money ontime, report the news direct and live. I wonder if you typing your comments at home or at an internet cafe. Te he he he.
  10. This anti-competitive, anti-innovative and monopolistic move be GT&T is ridiculous and when our business formerly launches in Guyana should GT&T continue to engage in this type of behavior them we will see them in the U. S. or Guyana courts.

    http://www.OrionEnterprises.com

    http://www.OrionResourcesIntl.com

    “E pluribus unum” - “Out of Many, One,”!

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/E_pluribus_unum

    http://www.greatseal.com/mottoes/unum.html

    We Are In This Together!

    KG.

  11. STONEBLISS GUYANA says:
    What about copyright issues, are they going to be dealt with too or are the poor musicians of Guyana going to be continually denied their human rights forever and ever to the enjoyment of all and sundry and at the discretion of the two GREAT peas in a pod(pnc and ppp). The golden arrowhead should be replaced by the jolly roger(skull and crossbones) in this land of piracy heaven.What about the evasion of paying royalties by the govt. owned radio stations and tv stations? What example are they setting?
  12. SWAT UNITED STATES says:
    and pay up and stop blaming the GRA! It is your responsibility to pay taxes on the services you’re providing. Don’t give the GRA a reason to come after you for their revenue….because they will. You’re using GT&T infrastructure that was in place long before anyone of you could spell the word Internet. You guys are piggybacking off the GT& T infrastructure and are complaining to booth. The solution is simple: Pay your taxes…service restored. Business does not suffer. Don’t have to lay off employees. Everyone benefits. Nuff said.
    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      What page are you on, its not about paying taxes, its about GTT keeping their monopoly and now they would like to extend that monopoly to the internet which does not belong to them. Their DSL fees charged to their customers including cafe’s are the cost of the infrastructure. Wht GTT is trying to do is tell us how to use the dsl. GRA has a right to collect taxes and they should to that if cafe’s, hotels, taxi drivers, gpl, gtt, hair salons, grocery stores, video shops etc are not paying. GRA should not single out internet cafe’s as the only violator of taxes. Has the GRA even released any numbers, names or figures of who and how much they think is not being paid. They dont care, they are only looking to back GTT continued monopoly ambition.
  13. SWAT UNITED STATES says:
    Internet café owners you need to listen to Mr. Thompson and to your lawyer, Mr. Fraser and pay up and stop blaming the GRA! It is your responsibility to pay taxes on the services you’re providing. Don’t give the GRA a reason to come after you for their revenue….because they will. You’re using GT&T infrastructure that was in place long before anyone of you could spell the word Internet. You guys are piggybacking off the GT& T infrastructure and are complaining to booth. The solution is simple: Pay your taxes…service restored. Business does not suffer. Don’t have to lay off employees. Everyone benefits. Nuff said.
  14. Joe Coxall UNITED STATES says:
    Listen folks, if they try to tax this medium, then the people have to circumvent it, because the internet is free, except for the connection cost.

    Just about every home in the USA have a computer, now everyone with a computer and internet connection in Guyana just have to download SKYPE and have the people in the USA do the same and continue to provide the service as an underground business.

    Joe

    • That is an excellent idea to use the “SKYPE” technologies Uncle Joe; but, why if someone is conducting a legitimate business they should resort to “underground” tactics when the “tax exemptions/deductions” for certain expenses would be in place.
    • decanadianCarlVeecock CANADA says:
      Joe..I think that SKYPE is on the restricted list by GTT&T

      I am no longer getting those call from Guyana…plus when I use my Yahoo Messenger, the voice mail no longer arrives.

      Is despotism at work now.

    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      i think some of the reporters that writes these stories should try to do some research of their own sometimes you know, just don’t write what people say, go do some fact finding. For instance GTT announced that they are not blocking messenger applications but that is not true, I’m trying to call someone on my yahoo messenger right now and its not going through, its going to voicemail and they person is not getting the voicemails. also I cant receive calls, the messenger just wont ring. Guess what you think I can call GTT customer service and make a complaint about this since they say its not blocked. I will tomorrow and let you know what their answer was.
    • tiger CANADA says:
      YEA JOE, if the govt continue with this behaviour,this particular situation will go underground, as in the case when there was no computers in guyana some years back and guyanese was involved with the overseas calling racket.stricter the govt wiser the populance
  15. Here are some plans and strategies to all internet users in Guyana (who are opposed to these draconian actions by the Guyana Government and GT&T) about what could be done - with just about two years to General Elections 2011 your time is soon coming/approaching - # 1.0 You know what you have to do when you get to the polling stations. # 2.0. After the new Guyana Government Administration is sworn in… have it (as one of its election campaign promises) terminate the GT&T’s monopolistic agreement; and, WALLA!

    Can You Do It (like the supporters of President-elect Barack Obama did)? Yes You Can! ;-)

    It Is Time For Change; and, the Advancement and Development of the Guyanese people!;-)

    Peace!

    • freespeech UNITED STATES says:
      the people have voted for change after 28 yrs, now most are happy, just a few are not and those are the ones wants free services without paying for it.
      we know what changes are long before obama.
  16. decanadianCarlVeecock CANADA says:
    I refer to these quotes to illustrate the intransigent attitudes that
    prevail in Guyana, plus the difficulties placed in the way of reporters
    and the people in general as well as power exercises.

    1.
    He said that a “grace period” should have been allowed while attempts were made to sort out the issues.
    …agreed, a grace period should have been allowed, but you think that
    when people have POWER they would consider any such thing?
    NOT AT ALL, BECAUSE WE WILL DO AS WE FEEL LIKE….ANYTIME !

    2.
    Attempts during the course of last week to get a comment from GT&T Director of Rate Making, Gene Evelyn were futile while the company’s spokeswoman, Allison Parker said she could not speak without
    consulting senior officials

    ….THE USUAL RUN AROUIND REPORTERS GET WHEN DEALING WITH IMPORTANT
    AND CRITICAL ISSUES.
    YOU THINK THAT WOULD EVER CHANGE?…NOT IN THE LEAST. POWER AGAIN.

    3.
    ( the GRA had declared )..that such operations are increasing rapidly and its calculations indicate that their collective impact on the national revenue collection effort is too significant to ignore.

    ….IF THERE EVER WAS A BLATANT LIE, HERE IS ONE! DO YOU BELIEVE THAT THOSE 600 SMALL OPERATORS WOULD BE GENERATING SUCH LARGE REVENUE THAT WOULD BE THAT SIGNIFICANT TO HAVE AN IMPACT ON NATIONAL REVENUE? THEIR
    STAFF TOTALS 7200 PEOPLE WHO ARE STRUGGLING TO MAKE A LIVING.
    ANOTHER EXAMPLE OF WHAT POWER MEANS… YOU HAVE TO BELIEVE WHAT WE SAY.

    • getreal UNITED STATES says:
      to add to what you’re saying its beneficial to point out that the revenue that gtt would have lost is not what the cafe’s has gained. GTT would have charged 100s times more than what the cafe’s charged which means that people would not have used their system often or not at all. GTT cannot charge us for using dsl/dialups and want to tell us how to use the internet which is a free application. However we should pay income taxes to the GRA and if there is any lucky internet operator other than a wholesaler out there they should pay vat as well.
  17. gt_hopeful GUYANA says:
    KaieteurGold:

    I see that you have indicated some resources in an earlier contribution you made on this topic. It refers to an IBM link.
    http://www-01.ibm.com/software/os/warp-withdrawal/

    http://www-01.ibm.com/software/lotus/category/uc2/

    If it is not too much, can you advise what service they offer relevant to info tech. you can email me on tic_fax1@yahoo.com. thanks

  18. This article also stated in part; re: “[...The last entry, on December 4 stated that GT&Ts current block on VOIP calls has not been revised and noted that the company’s technical department had successfully tested some mainstream PC to PC applications including Yahoo Messenger, MSN Messenger and Skype, which are not included on the GT&T’s blocked list and found them to be working. Well established PC to phone applications such as Net2phone and Mediaring remain blocked and do not work, the entry had stated...]” Here are some more of the best Instant Messaging (IM) solutions on the market:

    Re: “IBM Lotus Sametime”

    http://www-01.ibm.com/software/lotus/category/uc2/

    So, what is the position/policies of GT&T on these that come with telephony integration should Instant Messaging sessions be required to be escalated to voice contact/s. 8-)

  19. Additionally, notice folks “[...IBM offers unified communications and collaboration solutions with enterprise IM, presence information, Web and video conferencing and built-in Voice over IP capabilities to help meet your expanding realtime collaboration needs...]“. Will someone explain the need (greed) to “tax” an already built-in technology that brings innovation to businesses throughout the world!

    http://www-01.ibm.com/software/lotus/category/uc2/

    Lets Go Guyana… For The Real-Time Business Communication, Coordination and Collaboration and Don’t Let Them Keep Ya All Back.

    “Knowledge Is Power”!

  20. Arnold VENEZUELA says:
    They want better hospital,bridges,roads,schools,universities,,,,, development costs money,when cry for change, must pay ya’ll revenues. Or be struck out/close down.
  21. Berbician For Life CAYMAN ISLANDS says:
    What more the Governement of Guyana want to do with people trying to make a living, Now u attacking the internet Cafe, GT&T of them self have notting good for service and now this, ” God man” one thing to the next, presuring people. I think Digicel should bring out there intenet Service like how the offer it throught out the Caribbean, and let what GT&T wil say next.
  22. God Bless Youth CAYMAN ISLANDS says:
    What GT&T and the GRA trying to do, make no sence, In Guyana for 256MB is 10,000 and for the 512MB is 32000, when u put both together it don’t make, no sence either, when a man have to run 16 Computer in a internet cafe on 512MB intenet speed that GT&T thing they giving there best, all the doing is robbing Guyanese,cause u never get that, Now they want to block VOIP, what they need is a little more compertation, like LIME(Cable and wireless)cause like Digicel, did not open there eyes.”God man”
  23. God Bless Youth CAYMAN ISLANDS says:
    Every Body Pay a rental from GT&T, weather u buy the line from them or there is always some monthly somethinig u have to pay, then y now when u do all that they trying to block a internet owner from utilizing the internet to do watever he/she want. For the pass 25 years and still all of Guyana still can get a land line phone in there house,what the should b concern with, there minding other people business.
  24. tiger CANADA says:
    when you have just one telecommunications company, which has the sole monopoly in any country, then you have no choice but to abide by their rules, thats the problem in guyana today, now if they was at least two of these companies that share the telecommmunations systems in guyana then there would not be a problem of this nature, besides the govt run system there must be a private entity to compete in this only held monopoly.
  25. Politricks SAINT LUCIA says:
    This is what we call moving backward- forward. I am happy the IIHG took such matter up. This is what you call nasty communication it happens throughout the Caribbean. Let the Government continue to tax and tax and don’t pay public servants a decent wage, see what will eventually happen. This was one of the vital source for communication and to create employment, to create investment because talk time is cheap. But instead the government keep legislating. If GT&T complains thats there problem if they fail to deploy modernize technology onto there existing network and liberalized the market then things would have been different but all they keep doing is ripping off. They figure monopolizing the market is the only solution but today we are in the 21st century and if they “GT&T” prefer to keep there existing network to stone age so be it but people will always move to alternative measure to enjoy a better standard of living.

No comments: