[bestbits] The web we want
Guru गुरु
Guru at ITforChange.net
Sun Mar 16 23:13:25 EDT 2014
The World Wide Web turned 25 last week. After the invention of the
printing press, this is the most defining development in the world of
communication. Its impact is still growing and its full potential yet to
be realised despite the many changes it has brought in its wake....
....Tim Berners-Lee maintains that there are a few principles which
allowed the web, as a platform, to support such growth. “By design, the
Web is universal, royalty-free, open and decentralised. Thousands of
people worked together to build the early Web in an amazing,
non-national spirit of collaboration; tens of thousands more invented
the applications and services that make it so useful to us today, and
there is still room for each one of us to create new things on and
through the Web,” he declared.... in March 1989, a British scientist,
Tim Berners-Lee, working at CERN, the European Organization for Nuclear
Research, submitted a rather simple sounding paper titled “Information
Management: A Proposal” that gave birth to the World Wide Web. And how
does he view his creation? Why did he not opt for a proprietary system
where he would have minted billions? Why did he advocate an online
“Magna Carta” to protect and enshrine the independence of the medium he
created and the rights of its users worldwide? His answers capture his
concerns. In an interview to the BBC he said: “As to making lots of
money? If I’d made it something which was a proprietary system then it
would not have taken off. The only reason it took off is because people
were prepared to invest in it because it’s open and free…
....The forthcoming “Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of
Internet Governance,” to be held in São Paulo, Brazil, in April is a
crucial development. In India, last month, a new coalition — Just Net
Coalition (JNC) — was formed to provide inputs for this meeting. Its
main arguments are: “a set of principles that should underpin the
emergence of an Internet that advances human rights and social justice
globally, and the reconfiguration of Internet governance into a truly
democratic space. *These principles are based on a recognition that the
Internet has become a vitally important social infrastructure that
profoundly impacts our societies; and on the observation that
opportunities for the many to participate in the very real benefits of
the Internet, and to fully realise its enormous potential, are being
thwarted by growing control of the Internet by politically, economically
and socially dominant actors. Existing governance arrangements for the
global Internet suffer from a lack of democracy; an absence of
legitimacy, accountability and transparency; excessive corporate
influence and regulatory capture; and too few opportunities for
effective participation by people, especially from developing countries.”**
*
read the full article at
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/Readers-Editor/the-web-we-want/article5792955.ece
read the JNC principles document at
http://content.netmundial.br/contribution/towards-a-just-and-equitable-internet-for-all/110
regards
Guru
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