[governance] Civil Society Statement at the upcoming UN meeting on democratizing global governance of the Internet
Guru गुरु
Guru at ITforChange.net
Fri May 11 05:24:10 EDT 2012
Dear friends,
As per the UN General Assembly resolution of December 2011, the UN
Commission on Science and Technology for Development is holding a one
day meeting on 'Enhanced Cooperation on Public Policy Issues Pertaining
to the Internet' on 18th of May in Geneva.This important meeting will
take stock of the future directions for global Internet governance and
what may be needed to democratise it. *A joint statement
<http://www.itforchange.net/civil_society_statement_on_democratic_internet>
by civil society organisations and individuals is being proposed on this
occasion*. The statement is enclosed and also provided below. A document
on 'background' information is also enclosed.
This is a call to support and endorse the statement. We urge you to
please pass this on to *your networks*as well. We are happy to provide
any clarification that may be needed, and to engage further on this
subject. *If you would like to support this statement, kindly send your
endorsement – organisational or personal – to itfc at itforchange.net
<mailto:itfc at itforchange.net>, before 16*^*th* *May.*
**
**
Guru
Director, IT for Change
/In Special Consultative Status with the United Nations ECOSOC
/www.ITforChange.Net | Cell:91 9845437730 | Tel:91 80 26654134, 26536890
/*On behalf of the proposing organisations
*/
*Call for Support and Endorsement*
/_*Global Governance of the Internet must be Democratised!*_/
/A joint statement by civil society organisations for the UN CSTD
meeting on 'Enhanced Cooperation on Public Policy Issues Pertaining to
the Internet' to take place
in Geneva on May 18^th , 2012/
/*proposed by */
/*Focus on the Global South *(Thailand),*Instituto Nupef *(Brazil)*, IT
for Change *(India)*, */
/*Knowledge Commons *(India),*Other News (*Italy),*Third World Network
*(Malaysia)**/
/*and endorsed by */
/*organisations and individuals listed at the end of the statement*/
The Internet is a major force today, restructuring our economic, social,
political and cultural systems. Most people implicitly assume that it is
basically a beneficent force, needing, if at all, some caution only at
the user-end. This may have been true in the early stages when the
Internet was created and sustained by benevolent actors, including
academics, technologists, and start-up enterprises that challenged big
businesses. However, we are getting past that stage now. What used to be
a public network of millions of digital spaces, is now largely a
conglomeration of a few proprietary spaces. (A few websites like Google,
Facebook, Twitter and Amazon together make much of what is considered
the Internet by most people today.) We are also moving away from a
browser-centric architecture of the 'open' Internet to an
applications-driven mobile Internet, that is even more closed and ruled
by proprietary spaces (like App Store and Android Market). *In fact,
some Internet plans for mobiles come**only with a few big websites and
applications, without the open 'public' Internet, which is an ominous
pointer to what the future Internet may look like. *What started off as
a global public resource is well on its way to becoming a set of
monopoly private enclosures, and a means for entrenching dominant power.
*At this stage, it is crucial to actively defend and promote the
Internet's immense potential as a democratic and egalitarian force,
including through appropriate principles and policies at the global level.*
/*Who governs the Internet*/
It is a myth that /'the Internet is not governed by anyone'/. It is also
not a coincidence nor a natural order of things that the Internet, and
through it, our future societies, are headed in the way of unprecedented
private gate-keeping and rentier-ing. The architecture of the Internet
is being actively shaped today by the most powerful forces, both
economic and political. A few US based companies increasingly have
monopoly control over most of the Internet. The US government itself
controls some of the most crucial nodes of the global digital network.
*Together, these two forces, in increasing conjunction, are determining
the techo-social structure of a new unipolar world.*It is important for
progressive actors to urgently address this situation, through seeking
globally democratic forms of governance of the Internet.
While the US government and US based monopoly Internet companies already
have a close working relationship to support and further each other's
power, this relationship is now being formalised through new power
compacts; whether in the area of extra-territorial IP enforcement (read,
global economic extraction) through legislations like _SOPA
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Stop_Online_Piracy_Act>_, or in the area
of security (read, global extension of coercive power) through
cyber-security legislations like _CIPSA
<http://www.federaltimes.com/article/20120427/IT01/204270303/?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter>_.
The US government has stubbornly refused to democratise the oversight of
the Internet's root server and domain name system, which it controls.
While the US pooh-poohs the security concerns expressed by other
countries vis-a-vis such unacceptable unilateralism, rather
hypocritically, it seeks to contractually obligate the non-profit
managing these key infrastructures to appoint its security officials
only on US government advice. (The chief security officer of this
non-profit body is already, in fact, a sworn member of the 'Homeland
Security Advisory Council' of the US!)
Apart from the direct application of US law and whims (think _Wikileaks
<http://www.technewsreview.com.au/article.php?article=13028>_) over the
global Internet, and Internet-based social activity (increasingly a
large part of our social existence), default global law is also being
written by the clubs of powerful countries that routinely draft Internet
policies and policy frameworks today. The OECD and Council of Europe are
two active sites of such policy making,covering areas like
cyber-security, Internet intermediary liability, search engines, social
networking sites etc. Last year, OECD came out with its '_Principles for
Internet Policy-Making
<http://www.oecd.org/dataoecd/40/21/48289796.pdf>_'. These Principles,
heavy on IP enforcement and private policing through large North-based
Internet companies, are to guide Internet policies in all OECD
countries. Recently, OECD decided to 'invite' other, non-OECD, countries
to accede to these Principles. *This is the new paradigm of global
governance, where the powerful countries make the laws and the rest of
the world must accept and implement them. *
/*Who is not allowed at the governance table*/
While Northern countries are very active at Internet related policy- and
law-making, which have extra-territorial ambition and reach, they
strongly resist any UN based initiative for development of global
Internet principles and policies.*This is in keeping with the
increasingly common Northern efforts at undermining UN/ multi-lateral
frameworks in other global governance arenas*like trade, IP etc. For
instance; trying to keep global financial systems out of UNCTAD's
purview at the recent Doha UNCTAD meeting
<http://ourworldisnotforsale.org/en/signon/strengthen-don-t-weaken-unctad-s-role-global-governance-towards-sustainable-and-inclusive-dev>,
and bringing in Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement
<http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Anti-Counterfeiting_Trade_Agreement>(ACTA)
as a new instrument of extra-territorial IP enforcement by the OECD,
bypassing WIPO.
The mandate of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) for
building a globally democratic space for developing Internet related
global policies is quite clear. The WSIS _outcome document
<http://www.itu.int/wsis/docs2/tunis/off/6rev1.html>_states that, “the
process towards enhanced cooperation (on Internet-related international
public policies), (is) to be started by the UN Secretary-General ... by
the end of the first quarter of 2006”. However, six years down the line,
developed countries do not seem to be willing to even formally discuss
how to operationalise this very important WSIS mandate of 'enhanced
cooperation', much less do something concrete about it.
/*OUR DEMAND - Internet Governance must be democratised*/
*We, the undersigned civil society organisations,**affirm that the
Internet must be governed democratically*, with the equal involvement of
all people, groups and countries. Its governance systems must be open,
transparent and inclusive, with civil society given adequate avenues of
meaningful substantive participation. While we denounce statist control
over the Internet sought by many governments at national levels, we
believe that the struggle at the global level also has significant
dynamics of a different kind. *Our demands with respect to 'global'
Internet Governance espouse a simple and obvious democratic logic.*On
the technical governance side, the oversight of the Internet's critical
technical and logical infrastructure, at present with the US government,
should be transferred to an appropriate, democratic and participative,
multi-lateral body, without disturbing the existing distributed
architecture of technical governance of the Internet in any significant
way. (However, improvements in the technical governance systems are
certainly needed.) On the side of larger Internet related public
policy-making on global social, economic, cultural and political issues,
the OECD-based model of global policy making, as well as the default
application of US laws, should be replaced by a new UN-based democratic
mechanism. Any such new arrangement should be based on the principle of
subsidiarity, and be innovative in terms of its mandate, structure, and
functions, to be adequate to the unique requirements of global Internet
governance. It must be fully participative of all stakeholders,
promoting the democratic and innovative potential of the Internet.
The Internet should be governed on the principles of human liberty,
equality and fraternity. It should be based on the accepted principle of
the indivisibility of human rights;civil, political, economic, social
and cultural rights, and also people's collective right to development.
*A rights-based agenda should be developed as an alternative to the
current neo-liberal model driving the development of the Internet,*and
the evolution of an information society. The UN is the appropriate place
for developing and implementing such an alternative agenda. Expedient
labelling by the most powerful forces in the Internet arena, of the UN,
and of developing countries, as being interested /only/in 'controlling
the Internet', and under this cover, continually shaping the
architecture of the Internet and its social paradigm to further their
narrow interests, is a bluff that must be called.
We demand that a *Working Group of the UN Commission on Science and
Technology for Development (CSTD) be instituted to explore possible ways
of implementing 'enhanced cooperation' for global Internet-related
policies*. (Such a CSTD Working Group is also being sought by some
developing countries.) 'Enhanced cooperation' must be implemented
through innovative multi-lateral mechanisms, that are participatory.
Internet policy-making cannot be allowed to remain the preserve of one
country or clubs of rich countries. *If the Internet is to promote
democracy in the world*, which incidentally is the much touted agenda of
the US and other Northern countries, *the Internet itself has, first, to
be governed democratically.*
/*Click here for the current list of signatories to the joint civil
society statement
<http://www.itforchange.net/civil_society_statement_on_democratic_internet>
*/
/**//*Click here to endorse the statement
<http://www.itforchange.net/civil_society_statement_on_democratic_internet>*/
********
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