geert lovink on Sat, 14 Feb 2004 13:30:12 +0100 (CET) |
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<nettime> wsis digest no. 6 |
World Summit on Information Society Nettime Digest, no. 6 February 14, 2004 1. Global Forum on Internet Governance (March 25-26, NYC) 2. Experts' Round at ITU 3. ICC Paper on Clearing Up Confusion Over Internet Governance 4. re: ITU Internet Governance Workshop 5. ICANN's At Large Advisory Committee on WSIS -- 1. NEW YORK, 5 February (UN Department of Economic and Social Affairs)-- A Global Forum on Internet Governance will be held on 25-26 March 2004 at United Nations Headquarters in New York, to bring together leading actors and all relevant stakeholders, including Member States,civil society and the private sector, interested in Internet governance issues. Organized under the auspices of the United Nations Informationand Communication Technologies (ICT) Task Force, the Global Forum will be an opportunity to engage in an open discussion on all aspects of Internet governance. The views expressed from around the world in on-line discussions to be organized with other partners in the weeks ahead will contribute to the Forum to ensure as broad and comprehensive a reflection of perspectives and ideas on the issues to be addressed. The Global Forum will contribute to the world-wide consultation process to be organized by the Secretary-General. (For future announcements, please visit: www.unicttaskforce.org/sixthmeeting, http://www.wsis-online.net/. The Plan of Action adopted at the Geneva phase of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) in December 2003, requested the United Nations Secretary-General "to set up a working group on Internet governance, in an open and inclusive process that ensures a mechanism for the full and active participation of governments, the private sector and civil society from both developing and developed countries, involving relevant intergovernmental and international organizationsand forums, to investigate and make proposals for action, as appropriate, on the governance of Internet by 2005". Among the principal issues that the group will address are a working definition of Internet governance, identification of relevant public policy issues, and the roles and responsibilities of different stakeholders. While the Secretary-General has yet to make a final decision on how to organize a Working Group on Internet Governance, he expressed his view that this Global Forum "will be of great utility"for any future consultation process. The Task Force is a multi-stakeholder initiative launched by the Secretary-General in 2001. In supporting the first phase of the WSIS, the Task Force successfully helped in placing the United Nations development objectives at the heart of the Summit and mobilized the participation of the multi-stakeholder networks, organized a series of side events and launched new initiatives, including on education. The Task Force intends to contribute actively to the preparations for the second phase of the WSIS leading up to the Tunis Summit in November 2005. The Secretary-General has decided to extend the initial three-year term ofthe Task Force until the end of 2005. In his letter of 29 January 2004 to the Chairperson of the Task Force, Mr. Jos�-Mar�a FigueresOlsen, the Secretary-General stated: "I have followed the work of the Task Force with keen interest and wish to express my appreciation to you and the other members for your successful efforts in helping to place ICT at the service of development, making this a central theme of the WSIS". -- 2. 26-27 February 2004, ITU: Background and Objectives The workshop objective is to contribute to the ITU's process that will prepare its inputs and position vis-�-vis the United Nations working group to be established on Internet governance, resulting from the Declaration of Principles and Action Plan adopted on 12 December 2003 at the first phase of the World Summit on the Information Society. The workshop will provide a forum for invited experts to exchange views and make analytical studies on definitions, viewpoints and visions on Internet governance from several aspects, including legal, technological, administration and commercial issues. The format is one of the ITU Strategy and Policy Unit's New Initiatives workshops held since 1999 in line with ITU Council Decision 496. These workshops have limited space availability and are intended to foster efficient and effective discussion among experts on specific topics. To this purpose, individual experts in Internet governance have been invited from a wide spectrum of backgrounds and views, including from the ITU's Membership. Keeping in mind that the event is an experts workshop, with limited space availability, ITU Members with an interest in participation should contact the ITU Strategy and Policy Unit at [email protected], with specific reference to their individual background in Internet governance issues. All discussions and results from the workshop will be compiled into a report and communicated to the entire ITU Membership and submitted to the appropriate ITU decision-making bodies for their further consideration. Invited experts: a.. Izumi AIZU, Principal, Asia Network Research (biography) b.. Karl AUERBACH, InterWorking Labs c.. Vittorio BERTOLA, Chairman, ICANN At-Large Advisory Committee d.. Derrick COGBURN, Professor, School of Information, University of Michigan e.. Ken CUKIER, Research Fellow, Kennedy School of Government, Harvard University f.. William DRAKE, Senior Associate, International Centre for Trade and Sustainable Development g.. Michael GEIST, Professor of Law, University of Ottawa h.. Ayesha HASSAN, Senior Policy Manager for E-Business, IT and Telecoms, International Chamber of Commerce i.. Marc HOLITSCHER, Research Associate, International Relations Department, University of Zurich j.. Paul KANE, Chairman, CENTR k.. Daniel KARRENBERG, Chief Scientist, RIPE NCC l.. Sergei KAMBALOV, Deputy Executive Coordinator, Secretariat of the UN ICT Task Force m.. Wolfgang KLEINWAECHTER, Professor, University of Arhaus n.. Jovan KURBALIJA, Director of DiploFundation and Author, "Internet Governance: Cyber-Empires and Digital Divides" o.. Bertrand de LA CHAPPELLE, Editor, OpenWSIS Initiative p.. Bill MANNING, Managing Partner, EP.NET q.. Milton MUELLER, Professor, School of Information Studies, Syracuse University r.. John PALFREY, Executive Director, Berkman Center for Internet & Society, Harvard Law School s.. Ewan SUTHERLAND, Executive Director, International Telecommunications Users Group (INTUG) t.. Paul VIXIE, President, Internet Systems Consortium u.. Daniel J. WEITZNER, Technology & Society Domain Lead. World Wide Web Consortium v.. Johannes Christian WICHARD, Head, Legal Development Section, Arbitration and Mediation Center, WIPO -- 3. ICC Paper on Clearing Up Confusion Over Internet Governance See: CircleID http://www.circleid.com/article/463_0_1_0_C/> -- 4. From: Abel Caine <[email protected]> Subject: [wsis-pacific] re: ITU Internet Governance Workshop Date: 04 Feb 2004 11:53:19 +1200 To all, "Internet Governance" was one of the most contentious issues at the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) held in Geneva from 10 - 12 Dec. Fiery debates raged on the plenary floor and in working groups on the subject with no consensus except to form a very high-level UN working group to make a decision for adoption at the Tunis phase of the WSIS (Nov, 2005). The International Chamber of Commerce (ICC) is the lead business/private-sector organisation that essentially argues for the retention of the status quo structure and mechanisms (ICANN for the technical aspects, and the various IGOs for thematic aspects, e.g. WIPO for intellectual property). Naturally, there is an equally vocal opposing body of opinion (not exactly represented by a central coordinator such as the ICC) who are calling for either an existing IGO such as the ITU to take on the responsibility of IG or even the creation of a new IGO as the ITU tend to focus on technical telecommunications issues. This would give Governments perceived control thr ough the well-established IGO protocols (e.g. 1 Govt 1 vote (Fiji = USA), and private sector or civil society have speaking time but no powers). For those who are interested in IG, this is a small chance to contribute to the debate. The ICC will definitely be invited to participate in the UN Group (as will ICANN). The primary author of the paper is seeking comments which you can forward to me to her. I'm not an IG expert, but please allow me to make 1 small suggestion, I found the ICC paper did not list the issues from the "other side" and make counter-arguments. Yes, they're arguing not all ccTLDs are administered by the relevant Govt Dept of that country (e.g. I believe the Nigerian ccTLD belongs to an enterprising Nigerian living in the US), but they're also arguing a whole host of other IG issues. The 1 I recall is from all the hype at WSIS was cyber-terrorism (ala there should be 1 central organisation instead of each developed country having their own and developing countries never having any). Your counter-argument could be capacity building, funding, etc at regional then national levels but not 1 big organisation that would morph into a "global Gestapo" (I like that phrase :). Cheers, Abel -- 5. ALAC on WSIS Declaration of Principles and Plan of Actions ICANN's At Large Advisory Committee (ALAC) has released this statement about the results of the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS). http://www.circleid.com/article/454_0_1_0_C/ and http://alac.icann.org/wsis/statement-wsis-20jan04.htm # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: [email protected] and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: [email protected]