Gulf News

Skype block ‘annoying’, but official hopeful of change

Dubai’s senior Smart City official says Skype is ‘essential’

- BY ED CLOWES Staff Reporter

The issue of Skype, and its legal status, has become a major talking point among the UAE’s residents since it went offline again last year.

This week, Dubai’s senior government official overseeing smart cities and new technologi­es called the situation “annoying,” and said she was hopeful that the ban would be lifted soon on theMicroso­ft-owned video and voice call chat applicatio­n.

Aisha Butti Bin Bishr, director general of Smart Dubai, told Gulf News on Wednesday that Skype was “one of the essentials of life,” and it being banned, despite Dubai positionin­g itself as one of the most connected, technologi­cal cities in the world, was “annoying, for sure.” “Not only [is it essential] for smart cities, but also for individual­s,” she said.

Bin Bishr was speaking on the sidelines of the Future Blockchain Summit in Dubai.

Earlier in the week, Microsoft confirmed to Gulf News that it was in talks with the UAE’s Telecommun­ications Regulatory Authority (TRA) to lift the ban on Skype.

Local Arabic newspaper Al Ittihad quoted Hamad Obaid Al Mansouri, director general of the TRA, as saying that the TRA was in talks with Microsoft and Apple regarding Skype and FaceTime (another video chat applicatio­n, by Apple). He emphasised the need to maintain a strong relationsh­ip with the tech companies, at a time when their investment­s in the UAE are growing.

“We are working very closely with our telcos [du and etisalat] and the authoritie­s, the regulators, to understand how to ease this component,” and very soon, Bin Bishr added, she hoped to have “good news.”

Analysts say the ban on voice over internet protocol (VoIP) services such as Skype, Viber and WhatsApp likely stems from a desire to protect company revenues, and to preserve security.

Many of these applicatio­ns use end-to-end encryption, meaning that only the devices sending and receiving communicat­ions in a conversati­on can hear or view them. This poses a concern to government­s who may want access to such communicat­ions. “We have been working closely with the local authoritie­s towards gaining a better understand­ing of the local requiremen­ts in an effort to get Skype unblocked,” a Microsoft spokespers­on told Gulf News on Monday.

 ?? Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News ?? Aisha Butti Bin Bishr
Pankaj Sharma/Gulf News Aisha Butti Bin Bishr

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