International alternative networks are non-commercial agencies which are in constant contact with the improvement of media and information in their country. They differ from imperialist electrical power constructions that are inside governed and are self-sufficient, noncommercial options that make an effort to bring multimedia into the 21st century. They typically began in the 1990s but have expanded to include a variety of types of media like videos, reports websites and alternative web-based websites that offer video content. Many of them have evolved into multinational companies and are a vital part of any democratic media strategy.
These groups are united by their noncommercial philosophy, and their opposition to the imperialist system of power. These groups promote their opinions by organising information and communication reform campaigns and by promoting an inclusive and equal Internet. They also create new networks of communication that facilitate local and regional changes in relation to social movements.
The strength of these networks is built in cooperation, through the organizing of campaigns for social movements and media reform campaigns that adapt information and communication to the benefit of everyone. They are developing a complicated network of regional, local (especially south-south) and transnational connections that circumvent old colonial links between north and south as well as power dynamics.
While these international networks face a variety of obstacles like insufficient capital or skilled personnel, they continue to build regional links and promote the democratization of information and communication reforms. They are now a crucial element in the fight to achieve greater human rights and environmental sustainability.