[governance] RE: [NA-Discuss] ALAC and NCUC

Michael Gurstein gurstein at gmail.com
Thu Apr 19 22:11:27 EDT 2007


Okay, so you are suggesting, in "policy making processes surrounding the
Internet" we have universal suffrage including in this instance
basically anyone/everyone--every age, status and so on (and for all we
know, as has been stated by others sensors, robots, avatars -- literally
who knows what...) No links to a set of rights/obligations/norms/rules
as for example is the case of "normal" citizenship.

Also, your definition of "user" seems to miss the point of my examples
which were precisely that the users in the instances I quoted were users
only because of and through the fact of their relationship to the other
(and the participation of the other in the particular use)--the child in
the one instance and the other members of the community in the other
case. That is, the notion in these cases of "individual users" makes
little or no sense since the "individual user" in those instances is
defined by the specific "use" which is collaborative.

And dare I say, that my point is precisely to suggest that the basis of
participation in policy making based for example on "use" has to take
fully into account the fact that for many (in fact I would probably
argue that now for most) Internet users, the uses that are being made
and thus the basis of the participation that they would in fact wish to
make, would be collective rather than in your terms "individual".

And please note that I am not arguing here for (or against)
"organizational" participation but rather to say that introducing highly
culturally specific notions of "individualism" into this domain probably
diverts us from the rather more difficult but in the long term more
significant challenges involved in developing some realistic and
universally applicable structures and processes of "participating in
Internet policy making".

MG

-----Original Message-----
From: Dan Krimm [mailto:dan at musicunbound.com] 
Sent: April 19, 2007 5:46 PM
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org
Subject: RE: [governance] RE: [NA-Discuss] ALAC and NCUC


Each individual natural person is an individual user, even when working
collaboratively, I would think.  They each individually have an interest
in their use (both collective and individual) of the Internet.

Distinguish users from uses (and certainly from "accounts").  Even when
use is collective, users are individuals.

For example, parent/child homework collaboration: two individual users.
And as Robert points out, even if a user does not have an individual
account and has only sporadic and constrained access to the Internet,
that does not preclude the person from being an individual user.

This is a qualitative question, not quantitative.  The goal is not to
estimate the size of the Internet market, or to break out the functional
components of the Internet system.

The point is to establish standing of natural persons to participate in
policy making processes, surrounding the Internet.

Context shapes categorization.

Dan



At 4:17 PM -0700 4/19/07, Michael Gurstein wrote:
>In the instance where a child is working with the parent to do a
>homework assignment--who is the "individual" user--or is it not the 
>family; or a village is using its single access point as a way of 
>acquiring information concerning the location and method for digging a 
>well for the collective benefit of the community.
>
>MG
>
>-----Original Message-----
>From: Jeanette Hofmann [mailto:jeanette at wzb.eu]
>Sent: April 19, 2007 9:33 AM
>To: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Michael Gurstein
>Subject: Re: [governance] RE: [NA-Discuss] ALAC and NCUC
>
>
>
>
>> On the principle that silence is consent, if my argument is valid
>> then
>
>> could I suggest that the notion of "individual internet user" in fact
>> is more or less without content as it could either mean anyone, since

>> anyone could be an anonymous cybercafe or cell phone Internet surfer 
>> (or no one in particular--who would know or could make any judgements

>> in this regard);  or it should necessarily include some sorts of 
>> collective groupings i.e. families, communities etc.
>
>
>The notion of individual users matters a lot in the context of
>representation. It is not the same if individuals have a right to 
>participate in ICANN or if they need to join an organization such as an

>ISOC chapter to have a say.
>
>I don't understand how a family could form an individual user. Are you
>perhaps confusing users with email accounts?
>
>jeanette
>
>
>
>(individuals as collectives
>> hmmm...-and then who speaks for them and how are the "interests" of
>> these collectives to be represented, as collectives or as collections

>> of individuals etc.etc.).
>>
>> In a global environment where on the one hand Internet "use" is
>> becoming more or less pervasive and on the other where the notion of 
>> who or what constitutes "the individual" is highly culturally (and 
>> even politically) determined, could I humbly suggest that some other 
>> mode of delineating participation in this aspect of Internet 
>> governance be formulated.
>>
>> MG
>>
>> -----Original Message-----
>> From: na-discuss-bounces at atlarge-lists.icann.org
>> [mailto:na-discuss-bounces at atlarge-lists.icann.org] On Behalf Of
>> Jacob
>
>> Malthouse
>> Sent: April 19, 2007 6:36 AM
>> To: NA Discuss
>> Subject: [NA-Discuss] ALAC and NCUC
>>
>>
>> From: http://alac.icann.org/
>> ICANN's At-Large Advisory Committee (ALAC) is responsible for
>> considering and providing advice on the activities of the Internet 
>> Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN), as they relate to
>
>> the interests of individual Internet users (the "At-Large"
>> community). ICANN, as a private sector, non-profit corporation with 
>> technical management responsibilities for the Internet's domain name 
>> and address system, will rely on the ALAC and its supporting 
>> infrastructure (At-Large groups all over the world) to involve and 
>> represent in ICANN a broad set of individual user interests.
>>
>> From: http://www.ncdnhc.org/
>> The Noncommercial Users Constituency (NCUC) is the home for civil
>> society organizations in ICANN's Generic Names Supporting 
>> Organization (GNSO). With real voting power in ICANN, it develops and

>> supports Internet policies that favor noncommercial communication and

>> activity on the Internet, and it participates in the selection of 
>> ICANN Board members.
____________________________________________________________
You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
     governance at lists.cpsr.org
To be removed from the list, send any message to:
     governance-unsubscribe at lists.cpsr.org

For all list information and functions, see:
     http://lists.cpsr.org/lists/info/governance


!DSPAM:2676,46280d81273382123721259!

____________________________________________________________
You received this message as a subscriber on the list:
     governance at lists.cpsr.org
To be removed from the list, send any message to:
     governance-unsubscribe at lists.cpsr.org

For all list information and functions, see:
     http://lists.cpsr.org/lists/info/governance



More information about the Governance mailing list