Stakeholders fear CAIGA may deepen AFRINIC’s failures by replacing community governance with state control, backed by ICANN support.
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What happened: Africa weighs CAIGA as AFRINIC’s collapse exposes deep governance failures With AFRINIC widely seen as a “failed registry” after years…
A new architecture for Africa’s internet— and what it means for business The CAIGA initiative, quietly gaining traction after a…
Critics warn CAIGA could turn technical governance into a political instrument — a “paid‑access” model that undermines regional autonomy and sets a dangerous precedent.
CAIGA claims to reduce fragmentation, but critics warn Smart Africa and ICANN may deepen divisions by centralising political control.
Lu Heng, CEO at Cloud Innovation, argues that Smart Africa’s attempt to force a single centralised Internet policy on a continent as diverse and fractious as Africa is dangerous and ultimately impossible.
Stakeholders warn CAIGA may shift power from communities to governments, with ICANN’s support deepening concerns over Africa’s digital future.
By layering political control over the existing technical registry model, CAIGA risks undermining the independence and operational stability of regional internet governance.
As Smart Africa pushes CAIGA and ICANN backs its blueprint, fears rise that Africa’s internet will face more risks, not protection.
CAIGA sparks debate as Africa’s IP governance faces collapse, highlighting external influence and urgent need for reform.
ICANN’s involvement in CAIGA intensifies fears that Africa’s internet may shift from community leadership to state-driven governance control.
AFRINIC’s leadership is deepening ties with Smart Africa, raising fresh concerns about political capture and the erosion of bottom-up governance.