Outcome document of the high-level meeting of the General Assembly on the overall review
of the implementation of the outcomes of the World Summit on the Information Society
A/RES/70/125
with 3.4 per cent in 2005, and that mobile broadband remains the fastest growing
market segment, with continuous double-digit growth rates reaching 47 per cent in
2015, a value that increased 12 times since 2007.
15. We note that the digital economy is an important and growing part of the
global economy, and that connectivity is correlated with increases in gross domestic
product. Information and communications technologies have created a new
generation of businesses, innovators and jobs, while altering and making obsolete
others, and have also generally increased the efficiency, market access and ingenuity
of all sectors. We recognize the critical importance of expanding the participation of
all countries, particularly developing countries, in the digital economy.
16. We also recognize that information and communications technologies are
contributing to higher levels of social benefit and inclusion, providing new channels
among citizens, businesses and Governments to share and augment knowledge, as
well as participate in decisions that affect their lives and work. As envisioned by the
World Summit on the Information Society action lines, we have seen information
and communications technology-enabled breakthroughs in Government, including
in the provision of public services, education, health care and employment, as well
as in business, agriculture and science, with greater numbers of people having
access to services and data that might previously have been out of reach or
unaffordable.
17. We simultaneously recognize that information and communications
technologies are fundamentally altering the way individuals and communities
interact, consume and spend their time, with new and unforeseen health and social
consequences, many of which are positive and some of which raise concerns.
18. We recognize that information and communications technologies have
become important to disaster and humanitarian response, and further reaffirm their
role in enhancing and developing multi-hazard early warning systems, preparedness,
response, recovery, rehabilitation and reconstruction. We also encourage greater
investments in innovation and technology development for long-term, multi-hazard
and solution-driven research in the field of disaster risk management.
19. We recognize that information and communications technologies are also
increasingly a means to support the diversity of cultural expression and the fastgrowing cultural and creative industries, and we affirm that comprehensive,
practical digital strategies are needed for the preservation of cultural heritage and
access to recorded information in the digital environment in all its forms.
20. We further recognize that increasing use of information and
communications technologies both generates certain environmental benefits and
imposes certain environmental costs, which we aim to reduce. We welcome the
opportunity afforded by sustainable energy to potentially decouple the growth of
information and communications technologies from contributions to climate change,
and we also note their catalytic value for the deployment of renewable energy,
energy efficiency, smart and resilient city concepts and Internet-enabled delivery of
services, among other abatement options. However, we recognize that we must
encourage further action to improve the resource efficiency of information and
communications technologies and to reuse, recycle and safely dispose of e-waste.
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