AW: [governance] Article: "Italy moves to place controls on Internet

"Kleinwächter, Wolfgang" wolfgang.kleinwaechter at medienkomm.uni-halle.de
Thu Mar 12 15:59:00 EDT 2009


Good question Jean Louis. G 20 includes BRIC and some more (Turkey). I know this is nothing else than the "power house" not the "peoples house". This is one reasn why I argue in my triangle (IGF, ICANN IG 20) )for a "network" without subordination. 
 
w 

________________________________

Von: jlfullsack [mailto:jlfullsack at wanadoo.fr]
Gesendet: Do 12.03.2009 18:50
An: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Kleinwächter, Wolfgang
Betreff: Re: [governance] Article: "Italy moves to place controls on Internet



Dear Wolfgang

What is the difference in termes of legitimacy between G8 and G20 ? There is
none, since G20 is just a "oversized version" of G8.
Best
Jean-Louis Fullsack


----- Original Message -----
From: ""Kleinwächter, Wolfgang""
<wolfgang.kleinwaechter at medienkomm.uni-halle.de>
To: <governance at lists.cpsr.org>; "Lee W McKnight" <lmcknigh at syr.edu>;
<governance at lists.cpsr.org>; "Elena Pavan" <pavan.elena at gmail.com>
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2009 5:29 PM
Subject: AW: [governance] Article: "Italy moves to place controls on
Internet



Dear list

Here is my approach after the discussions in Mexico.

There will be - unavoidably - a new role for governments in Internet
Governance for various reasons in the years ahead. (Post JPA, enhanced
cooperation in a new political and economic environment, lessons learned
from the failure of self regulation of the banking sector etc.).

What are the options fort a role of governments in Internet Governance?

1. an enhanced GAC. Makes no real sense if you look which government sends
whom to the GAC (low level buerocrats with no real decision making capacity
at home). Additionally as long as there is no solution for the China/Taiwan
issue and Russia is only an observer GAC is not really representative.

2. an international treaty (as a result of the process of enhanced
cooperation among governments as part of the WSIS process) negotiated within
the UN system . Makes also little sense because such treaty negotiations
would last for 15 years or more.

3. OECD (is unlikely because it is not universal)

4. An high level intergovernmental political body which inlcudes the major
players and has the power to push various organisations which have
negotiations power to start processes on an issue by issue basis. The G 7
played such a role under the Clinton Administration to a certain degree.
They organized in 1995 the famous Brussels G 7 Information Society Summit
where they invited also South African president MBeki. The US government
pushed for a "Global Information Infrastructure Initiative" (GII). There was
already a parallel business roundtable which signalled the multistakeholder
approach. One year later was the  G7 meeting in Midrand. And inn 2000 the G
7 adopted the "Okinawa Information Society Declaration" and launched the
DotForce. This process collapsed with the Bush Administration. No other G 7
member was reallz interested to continue with DotForce which became later
part of the UNICTTF which now is the GAID. I could imagine that the Obama
administration will come back to this in the framework of forthcoming G 7/8
meeting. But the world has changed since 2000 and the  G 7 would be todaz
too narrow if it comes to the Internet. You need the G 20 which includes
BRIC. The acronym which I propose for this would be IG 20. With an IG 20 you
would have a gobal Internet institutional architecture where IGF, ICANN and
IG 20 would be combined in form of a network where the various institutions
act in their specific roles without subordination but with mutual respect.
This would be one step int this new territory of unchartered water which is
called cyberspace.

Wolfgang

________________________________

Von: Lee W McKnight [mailto:lmcknigh at syr.edu]
Gesendet: Do 12.03.2009 16:42
An: governance at lists.cpsr.org; Elena Pavan
Betreff: RE: [governance] Article: "Italy moves to place controls on
Internet



Hi,

I agree with Jovan, Elena and Bill that G-7 is unlikely to have impact on
Internet regulation; and that Berlusconi's impact beyond Italy's borders
will fortunately remain negligible.

G-20 as key forum I would go further and say it already is more significant,
for dealing with global financial crisis and other international issues
including probably IG. But its impact is also limited to heads of state
consensus/agenda--setting, since other institutions would have to pick up
implementation beyond the summit meeting(s).  As was noted G7 played that
role in the past including for info society issues, but without BRIC these
days it can do little.

Lee

For PhD student trolls on the list.
G-7 1st said  'global information society' in '94,in Naples; a ministerial
followed in '95 in Brussels, but was of no great consequence, other than
signifying 'global info society' issues were formally on international
agenda..  At least that's my recollection from the cheap seats of academe/as
a bit player/go-between for EU & US at the time. Lots of hot air but little
action - gee some things don't change.

Actually VP Gore said phrase 'global information infrastructure' in keynote
at ITU mtg in Buenos Aires earlier in 94 so ITU was 1st ; )

Look it up:
At the Naples G-7 Summit in July 1994, the G-7 leaders emphasized the
necessity of encouraging the development of a worldwide information society
and they agreed that the relevant ministers should meet in Brussels. The
European Commission extended an invitation to the G-7 to convene a
ministerial level conference on the Information Society on February 25-26,
1995. The Information Society Conference will include ministerial level
discussions on:

regulatory and competitive frameworks
the development of the infrastructure and access to it
essential applications as well as the social, societal, and cultural aspects
of the information society
Each G-7 Country, plus the European Union, will send Ministers responsible
for telecommunications and information matters. The conference will include
a session with private sector representatives, both users and producers of
telecommunications and information equipment and services from each of the
Member states participating in the G-7 conference. Technology demonstrations
will be given by governments and industry during the conference to showcase
the benefits and capabilities of information technology."

>From the U.S. Department of Commerce notice of public meeting on November
16, 1994, regarding the G-7 ministerial level conference on the Information
Society on February 25-26, 1995, in Brussels.


________________________________________
From: Elena Pavan [pavan.elena at gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, March 12, 2009 10:20 AM
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org
Subject: Re: [governance] Article: "Italy moves to place controls on
Internet

Indeed,

Bill literally stole my words
 this news is not that new either. we were in hyderabad first time such an
issue was raised by my government (totally overlooking the IGF... but maybe
even not knowing that much about the IGF..). despite what echoes outside
italy you have to consider that this "project" is part of berlusconi's & Co.
lrger "project" to slowly move towards a -how can i define it without
sounding drastic?- totalitarian/unilateral/individual "regime" (i guess it
is more drastic than what i wanted but sounds like the truth).
he is not aware of implications of this statements and i believe
preoccupations expressed abroad and by all of you should be seized down  (if
this can ever be a re-sizing) to the fact that there is a "leader" who
speaks as he does and is potentially dangerous. but, in this specific
regard, only potentially. italian policies on data retention are pretty much
strict and ujust, though but they are comlementary tot he overall limitation
of civil rights in relation to the necessity to guarantee "security". after
all, believe me, where he can do damages within the italian boundaries, he
is already doing. nonetheless, the "worldwide threat" posed by my government
is, in my opinion, more political/ethical than actual. none would follow
berlusconi path... maybe russia, as bill says, but maybe even they are
clever that us....at the end of the day, before coming out of the blue with
such a statement at the next G8 i believe (better, hope) berlusconi will
re-consider considering consequences that such a proposal might have. it is
not convinient, after all, to go down this way and he might realize it
before it is too late.. in other words, it is outrageous, but not realistic.
tchuss
elena

2009/3/12 William Drake <william.drake at graduateinstitute.ch>
And the 2000 summit in Okinawa addressed the global digital divide and
launched the dot force...

There's lots of forum shopping going on with respect to security
(broadly/vaguely/problematically defined) and it wouldn't be entirely
surprising for the G8 to be brought into play for a related statement, but
it's hard to imagine most member governments getting behind something like
what the Italian senate is reported to have done.  Maybe Russia...

Bill

On Thu, Mar 12, 2009 at 2:16 PM, Roland Perry
<roland at internetpolicyagency.com<mailto:roland at internetpolicyagency.com>>
wrote:
In message <6AB963BED20C4F4AA2B2F18EBC7F8543 at GINGERLAPTOP>, at 06:43:48 on
Thu, 12 Mar 2009, Ginger Paque <gpaque at gmail.com<mailto:gpaque at gmail.com>>
writes

I was particularly interested in any previous mention by the G8 as a group
to issue some kind of statement or guideline, as Berlusconi seems to be
suggesting.

They've done specific work on "High Tech Crime" (which is in effect more
about retaining traffic data). I'm not aware of anything in the area of
Content filtering - but I don't monitor it regularly.

--
Roland Perry
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--
Dr. Elena Pavan
DSRS University of Trento
Via Verdi n. 26
38100 Trento
GigaNet Secretary
http://giganet.igloogroups.org/

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