[bestbits] Why?

willi uebelherr willi.uebelherr at gmail.com
Tue May 19 15:20:52 EDT 2015


Dear Wolfgang,

i think, i understand, what you mean. But, if you quote Jon Postel with:
"Be conservative in what you send, be liberal in what you accept"
then you should try to use it.

The form of intervening of you, George, Nick can also create a pressure 
against an open discussion about our funamentals. Therefore, we have to 
be liberal and create an open space. But for our self, we try to be 
strictly.

In every discussion we find good things, good ideas, good description of 
relations. But i will repeat. The reality in the "Internet" is defined 
from other groups and people. Our friends want to go in, more deeper in 
the space of creation. But in fact, all activ people in this IGF groups 
and instituions are observers.

And the reflection of this feeling and realization we can read nearly in 
all discussions.

many greetings, willi
Cordoba, Argentina


Am 19-May-15 um 11:01 schrieb "Kleinwächter, Wolfgang":
> Sorry for intervening: It is really a pitty that the discussion on this list is occupied by hairsplitting, "I told you but you do not listen" and "I am right and you are wrong". Why this civil society network, which once played an important role in policy development in the WSIS process, is unable to look forward where the real challenges are with the forthcoming WSIS 10+ processes and concentrate on substance and how to reach rough consensus? Why people do not respect anymore what Jon Postel has told us a quarter of a century ago in his robustness princple: "Be conservative in what you send, be liberal in what you accept". Why they do not remember the language of the CS WSIS Geneva Declaration from 2003?
>
> The Bali split (2013) has obviously long shadows and old warriors have overtaken the discussion.
>
> My hope is that the WSIS 10++ perspective will encourage a new generation of younger civil society people who feel more committed to the substance of real civil society activities and do not waste the limited resources and energies for infighting. And do not forget: The WGIG proposal for a multistakeholder approach in Internet Governance (2005) was a compromise between "governmental leadership" (China) and private sector leadership (USA)and it opened the door for civil society to become an inclusive part of the process. This was a boig achievement of that time and an opportunity. It is now up to the next generation of civil society activists to build on this oppportunity. It would be a big shame if this would be destroyed.
>
> Wolfgang
>


More information about the Bestbits mailing list