[governance] Where are we going?

Izumi AIZU iza at anr.org
Fri Apr 6 10:26:36 EDT 2007


It's so difficult to catch-up!

Personally and very frankly, I don't feel like including .xxx to gTLD
is such a big deal, and by the same token, denying .xxx is also not
the most important policy issue for us.

I also tend to agree with what Bertrand wrote.

As Vittorio put it in the Board discussion in Lisbon, I see
big cultural differences in the .xxx debate, namely, most supporters
of .xxx to be added in the gTLD zone is from the US, except, perhaps
Peter Dengate Thrush from New Zealand also supported its inclusion,
though I am not sure how far New Zealand is from US socio-culturally ;-)

One phrase that comes to my mind around this debate is the famous
one John Barlow wrote ten years ago: "In Cyberspace, the First
Amendment is a local ordinance."

To me, it suggests that what is accepted in one country does not
become universal rule.

Of course, I understand many non-US people advocate Free speech and
which is in fact included in the Universal Declaration of Human Right,
not in US constitution alone, and our Japanese constitution also has
the similar clause.

However, definition/interpretation of free speech differ quite a lot -
which is most obviously displayed in the limit or acceptance of
porn/nudity expressions in different societies. Free speech in this
context is not absolute term by itself. New French rule concerning
religious expression is also another good example.
Many Muslim countries, they do not allow Western displays of nudes, right?
Clearly, here we do not have one universal rule be it real world or cyber world.

In the cyberspace, as Bertrand well described, where there is no
geographic progression of different cultures, the "g" TLD space,
unlike ccTLD space, is naturally regarded as more global space than
local/country/culture specific areas.

If so, to me it is quite natural for such proposal as .xxx to be
perceived as very offensive to some cultural/societal people.
In Japan, making ".xxx" as public label is almost unacceptable (though
there are some groups who might support this, of course). Please don't
misunderstand, while xxx, or hard-core porns are very much illegal,
so-called soft porns, quite bizarre photos and pictures are widely
distributed and displayed in general magazines or some TV commercials
in Japan. We just have different values and corresponding rules or
systems.

I also think "bottom up consensus" in a community usually means that
if there is very strong opposition/dissent from some
communities/stakeholders remains, in good faith, then even that is a
minority, we should respect that and not take decision based on simple
majority even though the majority could not accept with the reasons
given from the minority. So, I may say that if .xxx proposal receives
such strong opposition from some cultures/societies, ignoring them and
put it into one sTLD is, even it is labeled and controlled as sTLD,
may not be the best solution now.  If, as Karl argued well, there are
5,000 or 50,000 TLDs are implemented, then the weight of one .xxx may
become irrelevant. But that is still far from reality at this point -
I like that to happen, though, so that we can end this rather
counter-productive debate.

best,


izumi



2007/4/6, Demi Getschko <trieste at gmail.com>:
> Agreed, Bertrand!
>
> And just one more thing: I think all of us agree that in France there
> is freedom to profess any religion. Notwithstanding (and here I am
> *not* discussing the merit of the decision, just trying to make a
> distinction between free speech and free display of signs and,
> tentatively, one more analogy with TLDs), the France government in
> some way restricts public abusive display of religious symbols in the
> schools, like big crosses, the veil, the kippah etc etc.
> Best
>
> demi
>
>
>
> On 4/6/07, Bertrand de La Chapelle <bdelachapelle at gmail.com> wrote:
> > Hello to all,
> >
> > Two simple remarks - on a personal basis :
> >
> > On the Milton / George debate :
> >
> >  As it has already been mentionned, there are two extreme options that
> > simply do not work :
> >  - anything accepted / legal in one country / culture should be accepted /
> > legal on the Internet as a whole;
> >  - anything forbidden / illegal in one country / culture  should be
> > forbidden on the Internet as a whole.
> >
> >  Once we accept these two options must be out of the table, we are
> > confronted with much simpler questions : what should be the rules to
> > organize the coexistence of different value sets in the common space of the
> > Internet ? how are we going to discuss them ? and more than anything : where
> > ?
> >
> >
> > Regarding the Demi / Karl discussion :
> >
> > In the physical world, cultural spaces and the corresponding communities are
> > separated by some physical distance : the agreed public signs for each
> > community progressively evolve along a sort of geographic continuum. To take
> > Karl's pertinent example of the cross : the symbol is very present in
> > countries with strong christian communities, much less in countries with
> > other dominant religions. Likewise for "porn" : any pharmacy in France today
> > - or many  advertising billboards for that matter -  display images of women
> > so naked that they wouldn't have even been allowed in the "porn" mags of my
> > youth and they would be considered very offensive for people with very
> > strong muslim moral references for instance. I
> >
> > Community references evolve and what is agreed at one time in one zone is
> > deifferent from what is accepted as common in another time or another zone.
> > This is just a fact. And, let's be clear, this is why countries implemented
> > borders and sometimes fought aggressively to defend their own conception of
> > society rules - for better or worse.
> >
> > Problem is : the Internet is a common space and it does not provide similar
> > boundaries or a continuum for progressively moving from one cultural space
> > to another. With a single click (or even without in the case of pop-ups), it
> > is just like a  Star Trek Holodeck : as if you were to move in one second
> > from the most sexy Las Vegas table dance club to the inner part of St Peter
> > in Rome or the Kabbah in Mecca. Or, to take another domain of reference :
> > from the die-hard Davos capitalist crowd to the strongest Porto Alegre
> > anti-globalization crowds.
> >
> > Those two examples show :
> > 1) that this mere distinction between a continuum in the physical space and
> > the Holodeck effect raises new problems : you do not deal with the Internet
> > space exactly the same way you deal with the physical world; seems obvious
> > but maybe worth reminding;
> > 2) that in certain cases (the Las Vegas - St Peter example) you may deal
> > with a difficulty to preserve free circulation through the Internet Space
> > while at the same time avoiding unnecessarily offending people who would
> > like to remainin a coherent space. This applies both for avoiding the
> > placement of the equivalent of signs advertising lap dances on the right of
> > St Peter's altar AND for not positioning moral condemnations or call to
> > repentance at the entrance of entertainment sites;
> > 3) that in other cases, maybe the Davos - Porto Alegre example, the Holodeck
> > effect placing together streams of information that are competing views on
> > the same subject micht actually be beneficial to a better understanding.;
> >
> > In any case, the whole discussion is, once again, about coexistence of
> > different cultural and value sets in a common environment. This is a debate
> > that has not taken place yet and will necessarily impose itself. It deserves
> > better than just talking past one another. Using physical world analogies is
> > useful : to understand how people feel and to understand what is similar and
> > what is different in the virtual world as opposed to the physical one.
> >
> > Best
> >
> > Bertrand
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> > On 4/6/07, Demi Getschko <trieste at gmail.com > wrote:
> > >
> > > Karl, this is exacty my argument. May be we do not want to be in the
> > > very same situation you are depicting below... I do not make
> > > judgements about what kind of symbol a given religion/sect choose but,
> > > for the same reason, I think have to avoid incurring in the same
> > > errors, and impinging to others signs and symbols that could be
> > > offensive to them... This (I suppose) is on of the main reasons to
> > > have the public comments period.
> > > best
> > > demi
> > >
> > > On 4/5/07, Karl Auerbach <karl at cavebear.com> wrote:
> > > > Demi Getschko wrote:
> > > >
> > > > > If a sizable part of the community fell bad about some name, sign,
> > > > > picture (like those at the displays or posters on the streets, may be
> > > > > we would be intolerant if we force the people to look to something
> > > > > they do not like.
> > > >
> > > > Consider for example overt depictions of a man being tortured to death
> > by being
> > > > nailed to a pair of wooden timbers and being forced to wear a crown of
> > thorns
> > > > and pierced by a spear.
> > > >
> > > > It would not be hard to find people who do not like such displays.
> > > >
> > > > Should we then require the various Christian churches to abandon placing
> > such
> > > > displays on and in their buildings?
> > > >
> > > > Here in the US we long ago found it both infeasible and wrong to muzzle
> > those
> > > > who speak, or the names they use to advertise their existence (which is
> > itself
> > > > a form of speech) on the grounds that it might annoy some people or even
> > make
> > > > them intolerant.  One of the few exceptions is one of extreme
> > circumstances in
> > > > which the speech or the sign is equivalent to an intentional or highly
> > reckless
> > > > physical act designed to elicit a dangerous physical response; and we
> > certainly
> > > > do not have that (yet) in any top level domain name that has been
> > proposed.
> > > >
> > > > It is for reasons like this that I believe that the first principle of
> > internet
> > > > governance is that it should confine itself to matters that have a
> > clear,
> > > > direct, and compelling relationship to technical matters.
> > > >
> > > > For example, governance that deals with mechanisms through which end
> > users (or
> > > > their agents) can arrange for end-to-end, multi-ISP, pathways adequate
> > to
> > > > sustain usable VOIP would be a reasonable matter for internet
> > governance.
> > > >
> > > > On the other hand, dividing domain names on the basis of perceived
> > business
> > > > plans, who operates them, or their customer base, all of these being non
> > > > technical, really are not proper matters of internet governance. They
> > are,
> > > > instead better left to the normal work of national legislatures and the
> > slow
> > > > process of international agreements.
> > > >
> > > >                 --karl--
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > > >
> > >
> > ____________________________________________________________
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> > >
> >
> >
> >
> > --
> > ____________________
> > Bertrand de La Chapelle
> > Délégué Spécial pour la Société de l'Information / Special Envoy for the
> > Information Society
> > Ministère des Affaires Etrangères / French Ministry of Foreign Affairs
> > Tel : +33 (0)6 11 88 33 32
> >
> > "Le plus beau métier des hommes, c'est d'unir les hommes" Antoine de Saint
> > Exupéry
> > ("there is no better mission for humans than uniting humans")
> ____________________________________________________________
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>


-- 
                      >> Izumi Aizu <<

             Institute for HyperNetwork Society
             Kumon Center, Tama University
                             * * * * *
              << Writing the Future of the History >>
                               www.anr.org
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