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Kubatana's
Freedom Fone open source project wins award
Technology Zimbabwe
March 30, 2012
View this article on the Technology Zimbabwe website
The Kubatana
initiated open source project, Freedom
Fone, won an award for Innovation in Media technology at a ceremony
organized by the Index on Censorship. The award category recognized
Kubatana for innovation and original use of new technology to circumvent
censorship and foster debate, argument or dissent. The category
is supported by popular web giant, Google.
A Kubatana representative,
Upenyu Makoni-Muchemwa received the award in the UK, where the ceremony
was held.
An open source project,
Freedom Fone uses Interactive Voice Response (audio voice menus)
to create a communications platform where users can dial in to listen
to pre-recorded messages in various languages or they can send in
their own voice messages to the platform.
The Freedom Fone has
so far been used for an audio magazine called Inzwa that featured
news headlines, interviews with community activists, jobs vacancies
and upcoming Zimbabwean musicians. It's also been used for
short audio dramas, a question and answer programme on constitutional
affairs, and a phone in service run during Zimbabwe's premier
arts festival HIFA.
According to Kubatana,
Freedom Fone is also used in Tanzania, Cambodia, Ghana, Niger, Kenya
and Sri Lanka. The Freedom Phone project was conceptualised by the
projects current technical director, Brenda Burrell.
Please credit www.kubatana.net if you make use of material from this website.
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons License unless stated otherwise.
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