[governance] Australian Pirate Party pushes for an Internet treaty

parminder parminder at itforchange.net
Fri Sep 6 00:28:40 EDT 2013


On Friday 06 September 2013 09:04 AM, Jeremy Malcolm wrote:
> In the Australian election week, I noticed in the Pirate's Party 
> manifesto at http://getawarrant.org.au/:
>
> "The Pirate Party will push for negotiations to begin on an 
> international treaty for a free and open Internet.
>
> In 2012, the United Nations passed a landmark resolution that declared 
> the Internet to be a fundamental human right. The same rights that 
> people take for granted offline must be also enshrined online. An 
> international treaty can guarantee this now and for future generations."
>
> Naïve, or ahead of the curve?

Well, ahead of curve only if we want to wait till the architecture of 
the global Internet, and social processes building on it, is firmly set 
and too late to be changed. And this will be soon. Remembe the adage 
'architecture is policy' and so a policy coming too later after the 
architecture is rather useless.

I really dont understand why and how people say things like it is too 
early to begin talking of international arrangements - also knowing that 
even once you begin talking about them in a positive manner it may take 
years for them to get off the ground.... In fact it is already getting 
late. Around WSIS, the Internet pioneers and evangelists still held some 
high ground and people were ready to develop global frameworks based on 
such ideals - give or take some. As more and more malignant interests 
have discovered how to control the Internet and make it deliver for 
them, the chances of such agreements in fact recede. In the 
circumstances, what really is the case for holding that to begin talking 
abut such agreements may be ahead of time, far worse, it being naive?

Meanwhile, of course OECD is going ahead full steam to make global 
Internet policy and policy frameworks.... I think we need to get real, 
sooner the better. I mean if we are really thinking global democracy and 
global public interest,

parminder



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>
> *Dr Jeremy Malcolm
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