FW: AW: [governance] Internet G8 meeting

Michael Gurstein gurstein at gmail.com
Thu May 5 11:31:26 EDT 2011


FWIW, Canada's generally acknowledged "premiere digital media" event, to
which the Minister responsible always provides a keynote address (and where
the Minister is widely expected to present his current thinking concerning
digital policy) bills itself as "The Place Where Industry, Government and
Academia Come Together to Spark Creativity, Foster Innovation, and Drive
Productivity". http://www.canada30.com/

About Canada 3.0 & why you should attend

Join us for Canada's premier digital media conference where decision makers
and policy shakers across Industry, Government and Academia converge to
spark creativity, foster innovation and drive productivity.

Learn how Canada stacks up against the world. How far we have come. And how
far we have to go.

Establish lasting relationships with fellow visionaries, strategists and
entrepreneurs from leading universities and colleges, the private sector and
all levels of government.

Dialogue with the best and brightest minds in Canada.

Have your say in what Canada must do to earn its rightful spot as a global
leader in digital media.

Be the future. 

(I can't find the quotes right now... But the implication is that if you
want a shortcut to influencing Canadian digital policy you should be
attending this conference (fee $500+, + travel,
+accommodation=$1500>$2000...

Note who/what isn't invited/included.

M

-----Original Message-----
From: governance at lists.cpsr.org [mailto:governance at lists.cpsr.org] On Behalf
Of Adam Peake
Sent: Thursday, May 05, 2011 6:50 AM
To: governance at lists.cpsr.org
Subject: Re: AW: [governance] Internet G8 meeting


The G8 meeting that's a concern seems to be a side event, not part of 
the G8 proper.

See 
<http://gigaom.com/2011/05/02/france-to-internet-g8-will-talk-to-you-for-a-p
rice/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+OmMalik+%28
GigaOM%3A+Tech%29>

All the same, it's pretty offensive.

G8 in Okinawa/DOT Force did set some precedent for multi-stakeholder 
involvement so the situation in France now more than a decade later 
is a very great shame to see.  Like many first steps DOT Force was 
hesitant and very far from ideal, but things have to start 
somewhere/somehow.  The non-governmental stakeholders were hand 
picked by their respective G8 governments (GLOCOM was the Japanese 
rep.)  Developing country membership was very limited (Egypt, 
Senegal, South Africa, Tanzania), but their involvement was also a 
little unique at the time.  Looking back the recommendations were 
naive. And it was undone by changes in government (Clinton to Bush), 
and by moving things to the largely ineffectual UNICT Task Force.

FWIW the action item we worked on below. Now 10 years on.

France G8: Sarkozy and Internet Freedom just screams oxymoron.

Adam



AP5. Establish and Support Universal Participation in Addressing New
International Policy and Technical Issues raised by the Internet and ICT
a) Support should be provided for developing country stakeholders --
governments, private companies, NPOs, citizens and academics-- to better
understand global Internet and other ICT technical and policy issues and to
participate more effectively in relevant global fora;
b) The resource network identified in Action Point 1 should provide
information on decisions that will be taken at such fora, an open platform
for papers by experts, and facilitation of the exchange of views;
c) Support a network of Southern-based expertise - which could access the
resource network identified in Action Point 1- to support the
representatives of developing countries as they seek to participate
effectively in these fora and address these issues in their own context;
d) Global policy and technical fora and organizations working on 
Internet and ICT
issues should make a special effort to bring representatives of 
developing nations
into their discussions and decision-making processes;
e) The United Nations ICT Task Force should be encouraged in its stated goal
of identifying options for involving developing country stakeholders in
these new issues.



>On Thursday 05 May 2011 01:58 PM, Jeremy Malcolm wrote:
>
>>On Thu, 05 May 2011 14:43:18 +0700, Norbert Klein 
>><mailto:nhklein at gmx.net><nhklein at gmx.net> wrote:
>>
>>
>>There seems to be agreement that the IGC should respond (and I concur 
>>with this).  I would like to invite Wolfgang or Parminder to volunteer 
>>to write a first draft.  If they do not have time, I should be able to 
>>put something together as a draft based on their contributions to the 
>>list.
>>
>>
>>
>While I can try to put together some text, i am not sure what really do 
>we want to say. If it is *only* an appeal to make the G 8 meeting more 
>multistakeholder, as I have argued earlier, I am not interested. For 
>me, our communication should clearly make the point that in any 
>discussion on the kind of issues that the G8 meeting is taking up, all 
>countries must be included on an equal footing. And this is best done 
>in a UN forum rather than at such meeting of most powerful nations. We 
>can refer to the inherently global nature of the Internet and how 
>policy decisions taken by the most powerful countries by default 
>largely become applicable to the whole world.
>
>We can then refer to the institutional forms that have been mandated by 
>the WSIS - enhanced cooperation and the IGF, and refer to subsequent UN 
>Gen Assembly  resolutions that the two processes are complementary. 
>Thus any global public policy development should not only involve all 
>countries and all stakeholders, it should also always and continually 
>remain connected to the IGF as the agora where public opinion on key IG 
>issues is formed and shared. Something to this effect.
>
>Now, if these elements look ok, I can do some drafting. Thanks,
>Parminder
>
>
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