RES: [governance] Principles
Vanda UOL
vanda at uol.com.br
Tue Oct 23 17:53:45 EDT 2012
Very interesting Karl, we need take care with the private monopoly where nothing that people can do to change things will be heard. Countries facing loss of power are, deeper and deeper trying to get something to at least keep their own status quo, no new in this side. What needs to be new is the way the governance in several aspects of Internet. I am not seeing good news in this side.
Best,
-----Mensagem original-----
De: governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org [mailto:governance-request at lists.igcaucus.org] Em nome de Karl Auerbach
Enviada em: terça-feira, 2 de outubro de 2012 18:25
Para: governance at lists.igcaucus.org
Assunto: Re: [governance] Principles
On 10/01/2012 03:10 PM, Koven Ronald wrote:
> ... posited on the notion that the Internet has revoked the 2,500
> previous years of political philosophy and history.
More like about 370 years - since the Treaty of Westphalia.
The truth is that that world of geograhic-bounded nation-states *is* eroding; the edges of nation-states are getting fuzzy, especially since
1945 with the rise of nation-agile multinational corporations and since the mid 1990's with the rise of the internet and world wide web.
The granules of power that are eroding from the edges of nation-states are not disappearing, they are flowing into the hands of either private actors or bodies of internet governance.
Those granules represent plenary, often non-reviewable, authority over matters affecting the internet and its users.
When I was on the Board of Directors of ICANN I had fun tweeking the nose of a US Senator when I informed him of the indisputable fact that I, in conjunction with about 10 other Directors, could pass a rule over internet use of trademarks and names that would supersede and trump anything that he, as a mere United States Senator, could enact.
He got angry - much in the way we see the fear and anger of nation states bubbling over in attempts to re-assert and re-insert national governments into these new bodies of governance.
We are building internet governance on models that are more from the era of flower-power and high-hopes rather than on the 18th century models that recognize the aggregation of unchecked power and try to constrain that aggregation, models that form the basis of many national constitutions of today.
We have forgotten history.
Several of us have proposed various models of internet governance - and these models have all emphasized small, extremely limited, and clearly separated bodies, with extremely limited, if any, discretionary powers, each wrapped around exactly one highly and clearly defined internet governance issue.
That model of concise, tightly shrink-wrapped, and almost clerical bodies of governance would help eliminate the opportunity for a body to dance among the issues to leverage one issue against another to the tune played by whatever group of stakeholders has captured that body. We saw that happen with ICANN when it staved off insolvency some years ago by making an implicit pact with the address registries so that ICANN could have the cash to to survive and assert its role over domain names.
--karl--
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