As I pointed out in another thread,
they want to be data custodians. This is not to compete with Azure, AWS and the like, but to be an extension to data compliance. Expect POPIA to be amended accordingly as these policies take shape.
Having a look at the policy issues on competition:
https://businesstech.co.za/news/wp-content/uploads/2021/04/Cloud.pdf (PDF)
There are many other sections worth snipping to discuss which supports my speculative remark. Reading the above, it is obvious that the state would wish to be the consumer's choice and would also be in the position to manipulate the consumer choice and to regulate the consumer choice. Do expect the digital landscape to also be a restitution target, equality, and shared prosperity??? Shared prosperity like in regulating ownership targets, the same as intentionally regulating SMME ownership to harm small business development… rich policy is very rich.
The state is making it harder to have minority access to market opportunity.
I don’t mind the state competing in this sector and industry, but the attached anti-competitive nature to this is not sitting well with me. The ICASA thing got to me which dragged me back to a discussion board I don’t want to participate in any more.
I said years ago that the state will pursue small businesses to set targets where lucrative, it happened, and I am saying it now, the state wants to control this particular economic activity. Time will tell, but ever since the state adopted the ‘intervention’ lingo they have been radical in changing the market (and racial) competition.
To get back to data sovereignty ambitions. It is an expansive term. In European data laws it aims to empower citizens and entities to decide which data can be gathered, shared, used and saved, and this is incredibly extensive. We have a desire to be open-source, but I believe it lacks elaboration. To quote the policy,
which begs whether there is a motive to share private data with the state? I am under the impressions that moves are made to turn SA entities into cooperatives.
Also, don't be surprised to see these same principles applied to domain name authority regulations.
Yes, regulations are needed, but do know that the state plans to compete with an established market and that these regulations will be prioritising the SOE.