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The Internet in Chile: 1999 Was a Good Year
By Irit Askira Gelman
In the early 1990s, Chile was a South American leader in the renovation
of telecommunications infrastructure and in the introduction of
the Internet. In 1993 the first Web server in Latin America was
set up in the computer science department at the University of
Chile in Santiago, and the number of hosts in Chile per capita
was by far the highest in Latin America. (Chile is still a leader,
although the gap is much smaller than it used to be.) In 1995
and 1996, Internet growth in Chile was among the highest in Latin
America. The growth rate slowed by 1997, however; in that year
it was half that of Brazil and Argentina, and it continued to
slow in 1998. The slowdown trend caused great concern among those
involved in Internet businesses. A report to President Eduardo
Frei by the presidential commission on new information and communication
technologies, submitted at the end of 1998, indicated areas in
which Chile lagged significantly in the development of its information
infrastructure. The report suggested that:
- information infrastructure was distributed very unequally across
geographic and social environments;
- the majority of small and medium-size businesses were not connected
to the Internet; reasons frequently cited were high access costs,
scarcity of information and value-added services useful to small
firms, lack of security needed for conducting business in the
digital economy, and lack of an entrepreneurial culture that makes
daily use of the Internet;
- there was no plan to computerize the public sector, which delayed
construction of a government information highway; and
- the quality and breadth of domestic content available over the
Internet were very inadequate in general.1
After the previous years slow growth, 1999 turned out to be a
year of outstanding expansion. In agreement with the presidential
commission's observations, access prices were indeed lowered and
notable progress was made in relevant regulation and state computerization.
In May 1999 the Chilean government published a new regulation
regarding tariffs on services offered by Telefónica CTC Chile
(formerly Chilean Telecommunications Company, the largest local
telephone company in Chile). According to the new regulation,
Internet user charges were no longer based on the accepted metered
local service price. Instead, a new concept was introduced, the
tramo local, which means using a company's telephone network to originate
calls that end in another companys network. The price fixed for
the tramo local portended a reduction of 62 percent in the cost of Internet access.
As a result of the regulatory change, the number of new Internet
users exploded in the following months. It has been estimated
that the number of users more than tripled from June 1998 to October
1999 to 625,000.2

Figure 1. Estimated number of Internet users in Chile
Minutes of connection to the Internet increased to a larger extent
during the same periodalmost five timesand approached 287.5
million in October 1999. (Figures 1 and 2 illustrate the estimates
of the developments.) Not only has the number of Internet users
increased; average connection time has increased as well. It is
expected that the number of users will reach 1 million during
the first months of this year.3

Figure 2. Minutes of connection to the Internet
New regulations aim to end the inefficiency in interconnections
between access providers and to improve service quality. Right
now, traffic between end points in Chile still goes in part through
exchange points in the U.S. This typically is evident with small
access providers.
Lack of unity and connectivity have characterized the Internet
in Chile since its early days, when disputes among universities
led to creation of two rival organizations: REUNA and Internet-Chile
(now RdC). An important step toward unification was taken in recent
years when a group of Internet providers initiated a multilateral
Internet exchange, NAP Chile. The largest providers, CTC Reuna
and Entel Internet, have established an interchange between themselves
as well, and there are various other bilateral agreements. The
problem, however, was never completely solved. A new regulation,
issued at the end of October 1999, requires interconnection among
the different Internet access providers. The industry was given
a period of four months to fulfill the new requirement.4
Progress was also made on the legal front. A Supreme Decree for
the public sector published in June 1999 legalized the use of
electronic documents and digital signatures. Another bill passed
in 1999 was the personal information protection law, which safeguards
individual rights and protects citizens from the improper use
of personal data. A legislative bill for electronic commerce is
expected this year.
Modernization of the State
The government administration continues to modernize. A state
intranet and Internet are being developed, and in 1999 the government
instituted a central server that provides links to any server
in the state field.5
The governments new, electronic system of purchasing and outsourcing
is expected to increase the information flow between government
offices and private suppliers and to generate greater transparency
in this market.6 The initiative follows the examples set by successful systems
in other countries. Based on relational database and Internet
technologies, the system will notify potential providers by e-mail
about coming acquisitions; and any potential provider can register
free of charge. In addition, information on every purchase is
publicized, and the system allows the generation of historical
summary reports. It is expected that the new system will result
in annual savings of US $200 million.
Electronic services provided by the state in such areas as taxation
and customs have been expanded, too, thereby simplifying procedures
for individuals and businesses. Income tax return affidavits were
already received over the Internet in 1998. In 1999 the Chilean
Internal Revenue Service (SII) initiated projects for receiving
Monthly VAT return forms (form 29) and income tax return forms
(form 22) via the Internet. The number of declarations to the
SII via the Internet has increased considerably since it was initiated
in 1998.7 That year, 37,000 declarations were received; in 1999 the number
grew to 182,000. This year it is believed that 400,000 declarations
will be received over the Internet. Information flow will soon
become bidirectional: the SII will offer access to a database
on which it will be possible to learn what companies, banks, and
insurers state about a person, and to correct such statements
if necessary.8
Enlaces and Reuna2
Chiles major success to date in the spread of digital information
networks has been the fast and extensive diffusion of digital
networks in educational institutions, such as the Enlaces (Connections)
network linking primary and secondary schools and the Reuna2 high-speed
network connecting the universities. 9
Enlaces was initiated in the early 1990s at Catholic University
in Santiago as a pilot project. It involved primary and secondary
schoolsmainly in rural areas of the country, where educational
resources are scarce. The broad goals were to enhance efficiency,
quality, and equity in education. By 1995 Enlaces covered 100
primary schools and had acquired national significance.
In November 1998 CTC committed to provide free and unrestricted
Internet access for all primary and secondary schools in the country.
In 1999, 6,500 schoolsconsisting of all of Chiles subsidized
secondary schools and half of its primary schoolswere to be connected
to the Internet. Those schools instruct 3 million students90
percent of the nations children.10 The most recent update mentions the successful connection of
more than 2 million students.11
As of 1999, Reuna2 was the fastest academic network in Latin America,
with a trunk line speed of 155 Mbps.12 Besides serving as a technological platform for the improvement
of current Internet services, such as electronic mail, file transfer,
and navigation of the World Wide Web, Reuna2 also studies new
broadband services with the potential to enhance cooperative research
and offer new ways of teaching and working. These services include
large-scale room-to-room videoconferencing, multiple-site videoconferencing,
interactive distance education, video on demand, telecommuting,
and telemedicine.
Reuna2 now faces two primary challenges. The first is to ensure
bandwidth availability and reliability of connections for universities
and science and technology institutes across the country. The
second is to participate effectively in initiatives such as the
U.S. Internet2 project.13
References
1 Informe Final de la Comisión Nacional de Nuevas Tecnologías de
la Información y Comunicaciones, Chile, January 1999, http://www.modernizacion.cl.
2 "Tras Baja de Tarifas: Fuerte Alza de Usuarios Internet en tres
meses," El Mercurio Online, http://www.elmercurio.cl, 26 October 1999. The number of users
is not the same as the number of clients; the given estimate assumes
that for each client there are 2.5 Internet users on average,
http://www.elmercurio.cl.
3 http://www.sii.cl/SIIPRENSA/2401/06.htm. Again, the number of users is not the same as the number of
clients; the given estimate assumes that for each client there
are 2.5 Internet users on average, http://www.elmercurio.cl.
4 "Tras Baja de Tarifas: Fuerte Alza de Usuarios Internet en tres
meses," El Mercurio Online, http://www.elmercurio.cl, 26 October 1999; Utreras, F.I. "Diagnóstico, Evaluación, Perspectivas
y Propuestas de Políticas para el Desarrollo de Redes de Información,"
July 1998, http://www.innovacion.cl; "Subtel exige interconexión de ISP para fomentar competencia,"
El Mercurio Online, http://www.elmercurio.cl, 25 October 1999.
5 See http://www.estado.cl.
6 Sistema de Información para Compras y Contrataciones del Sector
Público, http://www.compraschile.cl.
7 See http://www.sii.cl.
8 "Javier Etcheberry: El impulsor clave de Internet en Chile,"
El Mercurio Online, 20 January 2000, http://www.elmercurio.cl.
9 See http://www.enlaces.cl; also see The second generation to REUNARed Univ ersitaria Nacional
(National University Network), http://www.reuna.cl.
10 Informe Final de la Comisión Nacional de Nuevas Tecnologías de
la Información y Comunicaciones, Chile, January 1999, http://www.modernizacion.cl; "Subtel exige interconexión de ISP para fomentar competencia,"
El Mercurio Online, http://www.elmercurio.cl, 25 October 1999.
11 See http://www.sii.cl/SIIPR ENSA/2401/06.htm.
12 The second generation to REUNARed Universitaria Nacional (National
University Network). See http://www.reuna.cl.
13 Informe Final de la Comisión Nacional de Nuevas Tecnologías de
la Información y Comunicaciones, Chile, January 1999, http://www.modernizacion.cl.
About the Author: Irit Askira Gelman
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