[governance] CS Speakers for Baku
Carlos A. Afonso
ca at cafonso.ca
Wed Oct 31 16:32:36 EDT 2012
:)
Carlos A. AfonsoWilliam Drake <william.drake at uzh.ch> escreveu:My apologies to Carlos, I cut and paste from someone else's email
On Oct 31, 2012, at 8:05 PM, Hartmut Richard Glaser wrote:
Correct name is => Carlos Alberto Afonso ...
==========================================
On 31/10/12 17:04, William Drake wrote:
Hi
The secretariat has invited Carlos Alfonso for the opening session and Valentina Pellizzer for the closing session.
Bill
On Oct 31, 2012, at 10:37 AM, Izumi AIZU wrote:
Dear list,
Sorry for not following this up earlier. Just too many things to do.
Though I said we may run a poll, I guess Carlos is already our de facto speaker,
and Nnnena seems to have received good support and fulfills the gender balance
and also from developing region.
And as Ginger rightly suggested both speakers will take up the talking points
into their text, with some degree of, of course, their own words to be added.
May I ask you if this is our rough consensus?
Many thanks,
izumi
2012/10/11 William Drake <william.drake at uzh.ch>:
it's what they're sending registrants
On Oct 11, 2012, at 8:42 AM, Katy P wrote:
What? When did this happen?
On Oct 11, 2012 8:24 AM, "William Drake" <william.drake at uzh.ch> wrote:
In light of the host country's jaw dropping decision to publicly
disseminate all participants' passport numbers, I hope whoever we have
speaking in the opening an closing will emphasize the centrality of personal
privacy protection in Internet governance.
Best
Bill
On Oct 10, 2012, at 5:10 AM, Nnenna wrote:
+1 On each of the points below. I am currently in the Côte d'Ivoire
Internet Governance Forum and my drafting capacity is limited. However, I
would like to see a line that extends "Multistakeholderism" down to active
national participation of all stakeholders. AFAIK, in as much as in some
countries, the government is weighing in, in ways that may appear
overbearing, in others, the decision-makers are actually note interested or
think it is an NGO thing.
Can we have a "Development Agenda" paragraph? I am also thinking that
"Participation" may also need to be a paragraph of its own
Best
Nnenna
Nnenna Nwakanma | Founder and CEO, NNENNA.ORG | Consultants
Information | Communications | Technology and Events | for Development
Cote d'Ivoire (+225)| Tel: 225 27144 | Fax 224 26471 |Mob. 07416820
Ghana: +233 249561345| Nigeria: +234 8101887065| http://www.nnenna.org
nnenna at nnenna.org| @nnenna | Skype - nnenna75 | nnennaorg.blogspot.com
________________________________
From: Milton L Mueller <mueller at syr.edu>
To: 'Ginger Paque' <ginger at paque.net>; "governance at lists.igcaucus.org"
<governance at lists.igcaucus.org>
Sent: Tuesday, October 9, 2012 9:07 PM
Subject: RE: [governance] CS Speakers for Baku
From: gpaque at gmail.com [mailto:gpaque at gmail.com] On Behalf Of Ginger Paque
I think that both points are important... I would say 'in addition to' not
'rather than'. Whom we choose sends a signal as sometimes as significant as
their words, and we tend to know their general positions as well as speaking
abilities when we nominate them.
Ginger and colleagues:
Yes, of course it is "in addition to" not "rather than" - but has there
been any substantive discussion yet? Frankly I think what they say is more
important than who we choose, but agree that in some cases "the medium is
the message." At any rate we are long on "who" and rather short on "what"
at the moment, so…
let me throw out three short statements on issues that I passionately
believe should be addressed. In doing so, I will make an attempt to address
them in a way that takes into account the differences among us and hope
others do so in the same spirit. Other candidate topics would include IPR,
development…I defer to others there.
Human rights
CS believes that the absence of gatekeepers and the open, global
communication enabled by the Internet realizes the promise of Article 19 of
the UN UDHR. To erect (national) legal barriers to the free flow of
information is a bad idea and contrary to the individual human right to
freedom of expression. We therefore oppose efforts to create "national
Internets," or to block and filter internet access in ways that deny
individuals access to applications, content and services of their choice.
All attempts to deem certain forms of communication and information illegal
and remove them must follow established, transparent processes of law and
should not involve prior restraint.
Security and Securitization
CS opposes efforts to militarize the Internet, or any actions that would
foster a destructive and wasteful cyber arms race among governments and/or
private actors. We consider the surreptitious use of exploits and malware
for surveillance or attacks to be criminal regardless of whether they are
deployed by governments, private corporations or organized criminals. We are
skeptical of efforts to subordinate the design and use of information and
communication technology to "national security" agendas. We believe that
Internet security will be achieved primarily at the operational level and
that national security and military agendas often work against rather than
for users' security needs.
Multistakeholderism
Global governance institutions should not be restricted to states, so CS
welcomes the additional participation in global policy making that
multi-stakeholder processes provide. But CS cautions that multi-stakeholder
participation is not an end in itself. Opening up global governance
institutions to additional voices from civil society and business does not
by itself ensure that individual rights are adequately protected or that the
best substantive policies are developed and enforced. In the informal spaces
created by MS institutions, it is possible that powerful governmental and
corporate actors can make deals contrary to the interests of Internet users.
MS processes must incorporate and institutionalize concepts of due process,
separation of powers and user's inalienable civil and political rights.
Milton L. Mueller
Professor, Syracuse University School of Information Studies
Internet Governance Project
http://blog.internetgovernance.org
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--
Izumi Aizu <<
Institute for InfoSocionomics, Tama University, Tokyo
Institute for HyperNetwork Society, Oita,
Japan
* * * * *
<< Writing the Future of the History >>
www.anr.org
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