What They Needed #
For many Indigenous communities, connectivity isn’t just about internet access. It’s about sovereignty—the right to control their own communications, protect their cultural knowledge, and connect on their own terms.
Commercial providers often ignore remote Indigenous communities as unprofitable. When they do arrive, they bring infrastructure designed for someone else, with terms set by distant corporations. Data flows through servers in other countries. Cultural materials end up in the cloud, subject to foreign laws and corporate policies.
Indigenous communities started asking: what would connectivity look like if we built it ourselves, according to our own values?
What They Built #
Across North America, Australia, and beyond, Indigenous communities have created their own networks.
Examples include:
First Mile Connectivity Consortium (Canada) A network of Indigenous-owned telecom providers serving First Nations communities across Canada. They’ve connected hundreds of remote communities, often in areas commercial providers refused to serve.
Rhizomatica (Mexico and beyond) Working with Indigenous communities in Oaxaca and elsewhere to build community cellular networks. Villages that had no phone service now run their own mobile networks using open source GSM software.
Aboriginal community networks (Australia) Remote Aboriginal communities have built their own connectivity solutions, often incorporating cultural protocols about who can access what information and how knowledge should be shared.
Tribal Digital Village (California) A consortium of tribal nations in Southern California built a wireless network connecting 19 reservations, owned and operated by the tribes themselves.
What Happened #
These networks do more than provide internet access. They embody different values.
Community ownership means community control:
- Data stays on community servers when appropriate
- Cultural protocols can be encoded into the technology
- Decisions about the network are made by the community
- Revenue stays in the community rather than flowing to distant shareholders
What community members say:
“This isn’t just about internet. It’s about sovereignty. We control our communications the same way we control our land.”
“Our elders were worried about cultural knowledge going into ’the cloud.’ Now we can keep sensitive materials on our own servers, governed by our own rules.”
“For the first time, we’re not waiting for a company to decide we’re worth connecting. We connected ourselves.”
What They Learned #
Technology can embody cultural values. These networks aren’t just technically different—they’re designed around different principles. Some incorporate traditional governance structures. Some encode cultural protocols about information sharing. The technology bends to the culture, not the other way around.
Sovereignty requires ownership. Using someone else’s infrastructure means accepting their terms. Owning your own infrastructure means setting your own terms. For communities with hard-won sovereignty, this distinction matters.
Open source enables adaptation. Commercial solutions come as-is. Open source tools can be modified to fit community needs—including needs that commercial developers never imagined.
Remote doesn’t mean incapable. These communities often have fewer resources than urban areas, but they’ve built sophisticated technical infrastructure. The limiting factor was never capability—it was opportunity and self-determination.
Intergenerational knowledge transfer works both ways. Young people learn technical skills. Elders contribute governance wisdom and cultural knowledge. The network becomes a site of intergenerational collaboration.
What This Means for You #
Indigenous community networks demonstrate something important: technology doesn’t have to be one-size-fits-all. Communities can build infrastructure that reflects their values, governance structures, and ways of knowing.
This isn’t just relevant for Indigenous communities. Any community with distinct values—religious communities, intentional communities, cultural organizations—might find inspiration here.
The principles translate:
- Own your infrastructure so you control your terms
- Encode your values in how the technology works
- Build local capacity so you’re not dependent on outsiders
- Use open source so you can adapt tools to your needs
Learn more:
- First Mile Connectivity Consortium
- Rhizomatica
- Internet Society Indigenous Connectivity
- Tribal Digital Village
These communities didn’t just get connected. They connected themselves—on their own terms, according to their own values. That’s what sovereignty looks like in the digital age.