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Showing posts from May, 2026

Digital resilience starts with radio-frequency spectrum.

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  Connectivity is meaningful when it is reliable and ubiquitous. In an increasingly digital and wireless world, people rely on connectivity for daily work, education, health care, mobile payments, weather information, transportation, safety and everyday communication. These services – along with emergency alerts – depend on networks that can operate securely and reliably, including in times of disruption or disaster. Much of that resilience starts with the world’s radio-frequency spectrum. The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) provides the international framework for the allocation and coordination of radio-frequency spectrum and satellite orbits. These finite natural resources support mobile broadband, satellite connectivity, broadcasting, Earth observation and space exploration, aviation and maritime safety, meteorology, radio navigation and emergency telecommunications. By helping countries and industry avoid harmful interference, harmonize technical standards and coor...

A shared responsibility.

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  Resilience means that digital systems are designed to withstand disruption, adapt to changing conditions, and recover quickly when something goes wrong . It also means building in backup systems, international standards and cooperation across borders, so that a local failure does not become a global one.  We need to build resilience into digital systems from the start — in design, operation and recovery. But strengthening digital lifelines is not just a technical task. It is a shared responsibility that involves policy choices, investment, international cooperation and public awareness. The observance of the  World Telecommunication and Information Society Day is an invitation to look differently at the everyday technologies we take for granted, recognizing the people and partnerships that keep them running across the United Nations and the countries they serve. WTISD-2026

Behind the scenes takes centre stage.

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  For over 160 years, The  ITU has brought governments, the private sector and other partners together to coordinate how the world connects. Behind the scenes, the Union develops global standards , allocates radio frequencies , and supports countries in strengthening their digital infrastructure. For example: • Every day, satellite and terrestrial navigation systems guide travel on land, at sea, and in the air. The  ITU coordinates radio frequencies, ensuring these essential signals remain safe and interference-free. • ITU and partners advance the use of AI for disaster preparedness through the Early Warning Connectivity Map , identifying where and how many people can be reached via digital networks. • Every year, the ITU Academy trains 5,000+ learners worldwide in topics such as digital inclusion, connectivity, cybersecurity, artificial intelligence, policy leadership and more. When incidents affect digital infrastructure, behind the scenes takes centre stage. Mappin...

The human side of connectivity.

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  For people on the move, resilience is not an abstract concept. It is the difference between being able to reach loved ones or being cut off. It determines whether early warning messages arrive in time, whether hospitals stay connected, and whether communities can coordinate relief and recovery. For many in the United Nations system and the diplomatic community, digital infrastructure is part of professional life. Negotiations, reporting, coordination with capitals and field offices all rely on secure, stable connectivity. A resilient digital environment supports dialogue, diplomacy, international cooperation and multilateral action.  WTISD-2026

Resilience matters now.

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  When digital lifelines fail, the impact can be critical. Our dependence on digital connectivity has never been greater. Nearly three-quarters of the world’s population is now online. While robust digital systems rebound quickly from minor glitches, they remain vulnerable to catastrophic disruptions. Core infrastructure—power grids, data centres, submarine cables, satellite systems and cloud services—are deeply interdependent, so a disruption in one layer can ripple widely. For example, extreme weather or environmental shocks affecting electricity supply can shut down telecommunications, computing and payment systems. WTISD-2026

Think about the invisible systems that make the day possible.

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  Help make the invisible visible. Tell us which digital lifelines play the greatest role in your work with the United Nations. WTISD-2026

Digital lifelines support societies and economies.

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Digital lifelines are the networks and systems that carry information around the globe. They include mobile and fixed networks, undersea cables linking continents, satellites that support communication and navigation, and data centres that keep digital services running. Together, they form the backbone of modern societies. These systems support essential services: banking and trade, education, healthcare, public safety, transport, emergency services and humanitarian response. When they work well, daily life flows smoothly.

Our lives depend on something we rarely see but constantly rely on: digital lifelines.

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This year’s World Telecommunication and Information Society Day , observed on 17 May , shines a light on those essential systems under the theme “ Digital Lifelines: Strengthening resilience in a connected world .” Chosen by the Member States of the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) , the United Nations agency for digital technologies, the theme asks a simple question with far reaching consequences: How do we make sure the digital networks and services we depend on are there when we need them most? When the alarm goes off in the morning, most of us do not think about the invisible systems that make the day possible . We check the weather on our phone. We message family across borders. We tap a card to pay for transport or coffee. We join an online meeting, book a medical appointment, follow the news, or call for help in an emergency.