Coping with new technologies bring connection to the most remote places and improve connectivity infrastructure in the national territory are some of the challenges that the country faces in the short and medium term.
However, to advance the roadmap also it is necessary to focus on the technological regulation of the country.
(See: Technology and innovation: the synergy of happiness at work).
Given this, Alberto Samuel Yohai, president of the Colombian Chamber of Information Technology and Telecommunications, CCIT, stated that the most important thing the new government can do, in regulatory terms, is to be focused “in an optimal environment so that Colombia can continue to receive investment”.
“A good example will be to give peace of mind to collaborative economy platforms with clear rules so that they continue to generate value and income opportunities in the country. In the case of the most traditional ICT segments, the greatest challenge will continue to be regulatory simplification, ensuring the application of good practices such as regulatory impact analysis before taking measures”, added the president of the CCIT.
(See: Business Concerns About Cybersecurity Risks.)
Likewise, Ximena Duque, president of Fedesoft, He suggested generating spaces for dialogue in order to advance in the great challenges that the country has in terms of regulation.
“It is important to continue working on connectivity, technological appropriation and its use to generate efficiencies in the economy, improve the efficiency of the state and its approach to citizens, and of course be a generator of high-quality employment, impact and social mobility. in the knowledge economyDuke stated.
(See: Technology and inclusion: this is how it is in India).
From the Colombian Chamber of Electronic Commerce (CCCE) reiterated the importance of developing “rigorous public policies” that make facing the various gaps, for example, that of electronic commerce in the country. In addition to the implementation of new technologies.
“Such as the adoption and integration of machine learning, artificial intelligence, big data, among others; development of infrastructure for ecommerce logistics, in addition to the development of digital currency in the future”.
(See: Culture and open software drive the Colombian public sector).
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