Over the past few months, I have participated in a research group at the Institute for Policy Studies and Media Development (IPS), in collaboration with the United Nations Development Program, to evaluate online public services (DVCTT) from the user’s perspective across public service portals (DVC) in 63 provinces and cities. Along with reviewing the features and user support tools on the DVC portals, the meetings and exchanges with people and civil servants on various roads of the country have provided valuable insights into issues related to online public services. These discussions also suggest solutions for improving the delivery of DVCTT on portals and refining related policy and legal frameworks.
Ensuring predictability, consistency, and stability in policies is one of the key factors that constitute a favorable macroeconomic environment.
When two central hospitals requested to halt autonomy after more than two years of implementation, concerns were raised that without private sector participation, public hospitals would not be able to purchase expensive medical equipment to perform advanced medical techniques for the public. A key question was whether hospital autonomy should continue.
Vietnam is lacking a legal framework for the clean water market, resulting in numerous contradictions and paradoxes.
With a "roadmap" outlining an ambitious goal of becoming a leading digital nation in the region, Vietnam now faces the critical questions of how to implement this vision and whether it has the capacity to realize this ambition.
At the end of 2021, Vietnam witnessed the explosive rise of blockchain technology. Soon after, a series of blockchain-based games emerged within a short period, showcasing the ambition to explore new markets and gain international recognition.
The sale of 17GB of data belonging to Vietnamese citizens on Raidforum once again highlights the severity of data and information security breaches. As data becomes the "heart" of the digital economy and is referred to as the "new oil," protecting users' information and data must be considered a pillar in the process of digital transformation, the development of the digital economy, and the digital society.
The draft of the revised Advertising Law, recently announced by the Ministry of Culture, Sports, and Tourism, stipulates that celebrities must be directly responsible for the content of advertisements related to the quality of products. Is this regulation truly reasonable?