[governance] what is it that threatens the Internet community or 'who is afraid of the IGF'
Raul Echeberria
raul at lacnic.net
Fri Sep 7 12:34:13 EDT 2007
Milton:
It is a very interesting mail.
As somebody coming from a developing country, I
can tell you that the attention to the issue of
Critical Internet Resources is very low in my
region, with the exception of the Brazilian Government.
In fact, it is very interesting the result of the
survey conducted by ECLAC (Economic Commision for
Latin America and the Caribbean).
http://www.cepal.org/cgi-bin/getprod.asp?xml=/socinfo/noticias/paginas/8/26998/P26998.xml&xsl=/socinfo/tpl/p18f.xsl&base=/socinfo/tpl/top-bottom.xsl
If you click in results you will see that
Internet Governance in general (expression
associated mainly to the CIR) is very low ranked.
There are different rankings but in all of the
this issue is ranked about position 37 in the
list or priorities for the region regardind Information Society.
So, It is clear that most of people in developing
countries don't care about that. It is
interesting to see that the participation in the
survey was very diverse and balanced with a lot
of people from governmnets, civil society, private sector and academic sector.
This survey will be the base for the desinging of
the Regional Information Society next 3 years
plan. A new version of the survey will be issued next week.
Probably some government will bring the issue to
the table again before the Regional conference in
El Salvador in November and probably it will
become part of the plan, but it will not happen
because it was defined as a priority, that's clear.
This is for commenting what you said about your
experience in the meeting in Oxford.
Other thing is if both set of issues: CIR and
development oriented issues are incompatibles and
we can discuss abut only one of them. Clearly they are not.
We can and we have to discuss both. But it is
important to say that we have to discuss CIR
because we think that it is important and we have
to accept that saying that developing countries
are worried about that is not a valid argument.
You raised other point that is if CIR related
issues are or are not important for developing
countries. And I agree with your approach and
with some of the examples that you use. I think
that they are important and have important impact in developing countries.
But what to proceed so?, If mainly people from
developed countries, decided that this is
important for developing countries despite de
fact that those countrie don't identify these
issues as important, we will be in the same
situation that you criticized regarding Oxford
meeting, and in fact my perception is that the
participation of people from my region in IGF
meeting in Rio will not be very large and most of
us from LAC in Rio will be the "usual suspects"
(including myself of course) . Hopefully I am wrong.
So, we have to find out the balance. We can
discuss anything but it is clear that most
important issues for developing countries are
those related with development. Should we stop to
discuss CIR, no, but we can not use developing
countries concerns as the justification for that.
Is this important for Developing Countries? we
think yes, but so, we have to work more for
really engage them in the discussion and not let
mainly people from the most developed part of the
world, to decide based on what is their
perception about developing countries needs.
Raúl
At 08:37 p.m. 06/09/2007, Milton L Mueller wrote:
> > -----Original Message-----
> > 2. A debate on critical Internet resources that absorbs almost all
> > public attention although other issues, particularely access, are what
> > most people in developing countries really care about. As long as they
> > are not online they don't give a damn about the role of the USG in
> > Internet Governance.
>
>It is important to point out that Jeanette is
>just accurately reporting what she hears, not what she believes.
>
>And I have heard this argument many times
>before. Indeed, I heard it at the Oxford
>Internet Institute conference last year, where a
>room full of British, Americans and Europeans
>insisted that developing countries don't care
>about the CIR issues, they care about
>development and access. And when I pointed out
>that no one in the room was from a developing
>country, and that the parties who had raised the
>issue repeatedly in global forums were Brazil,
>South Africa, China and a other developing
>countries, that line of dialogue came to a rather abrupt end.
>
>The theory here seems to be that time and energy
>spent discussing internet resource policy is
>purchased at the expense of developing telecom
>access facilities. So, for example, if Milton
>Mueller would just shut up about ICANN for 30
>days, this would immediately translate into, oh,
>230 additional access lines in Kenya -- a net value of about US$ 230,000.
>
>I don't know whether the economics of this have
>been worked out yet. It may be that my
>interventions in ICANN require such enormous
>investments in countermeasures from the USG, the
>World Bank and Japan that funds are diverted
>from global foreign aid. It may be that IGP's
>criticism of ICANN unsettles international
>capital markets, raising the interest rate and
>inverting the yield curve on bonds. Now there is
>a topic for future GigaNet symposia.
>
>Anyway, in a period where we are about to run
>out of IPv4 addresses, we are starting a debate
>on markets for IP addresses and the old regime
>won't even consider it because it would upset
>their control. And there are serious policy
>debates even within IETF about the bloc size of
>IPv6 address distributions. The idea that CIR is
>not relevant to ALL countries is just crazy. But
>it is certainly relevant to developing
>countries, who will be the primary source of
>demand for address space in the years to come.
>
>Likewise, most growth in domain name markets
>will come from multilingual new TLDs, which are
>most relevant to developing countries.
>
>Not to mention DNSSEC, another critical CIR issue.
>
>The challenge is indeed to move beyond old
>divisions and dichotomies. But I am afraid that
>the ISOC-US crowd, or those who attempt to
>discourage discussion of these issues, are the
>ones who are stuck in the 2005 WSIS debates.
>They think there is nothing to say about this
>but to repeat ITU-ICANN Punch and Judy show.
>Aside from showing a terrible lack of
>imagination, this is irresponsible. There are really meaty policy issues there.
>
>As physical access in developing countries
>grows, and as their own domestic ISP market
>increases in size, they will inherit a world
>where the rules for getting IP addresses and
>entering the domain name market have been
>written in the USA. More important than the
>geographic source of the rules is their
>substance: are they efficient, do they encourage
>competition, are they equitable? Perhaps at Rio
>we can move beyond Tunis if we actually have a real discussion of these issues.
>
>--Milton Mueller
>
>
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