---------- Forwarded message ----------
From:
Pranesh Prakash <pranesh@cis-india.org>
Date: Wed, Jan 22, 2014 at 11:31 AM
Subject: [discuss] The Global Commission on Internet
Governance
To:
discuss@1net.org
CIGI and Chatham House have a new project.
https://www.ourinternet.org/#about
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the Global Commission on Internet Governance?
The Global Commission on Internet Governance is a two-year
initiative that will present a comprehensive stand on the
future of multi-stakeholder Internet governance. Chaired by
Swedens Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, the commission will
include about 25 members drawn from various fields and from
around the world, including policy and government, academia
and civil society. All commissioners are listed at the
commissions website,
www.ourinternet.org
The commission will address four key themes, within which
are a number of sub-themes:
Enhancing governance legitimacy including regulatory
approaches and standards;
Preserving innovation including critical Internet
resources, infrastructure and competition policy;
Ensuring rights online including establishing the
principle of technological neutrality for human rights,
privacy, cyber-crime and free expression;
Avoiding systemic risk including establishing norms
regarding state conduct, cybercrime cooperation, and
proliferation and disarmament issues.
Why is the commission important?
The current mechanism of Internet governance, colloquially
called the multi-stakeholder model, is under threat. This
threat to a free, open, and universal Internet comes from two
principal sources. First, a number of authoritarian states are
waging a campaign to exert greater state control over critical
Internet resources. Second, revelations about the nature and
extent of online surveillance have led to a loss of trust.
Collectively, these circumstances have created a need to
update legacy mechanisms for Internet governance; but
deadlocks in international dialogue means the potential exists
for the fragmentation of the Internet. Accordingly, a
significant and timely opportunity exists to feed innovative
new ideas into these negotiations through the establishment of
the Global Commission on Internet Governance.
What is Internet governance and the multi-stakeholder
model?
The Internets architecture is constantly changing. The
content and computing devices which end users see are only the
surface of a massive underlying infrastructure of networks,
services, and institutions that keep the Internet operational.
This architecture comprises private information intermediaries
such as network operators, exchange points, search engines,
hosting services, e-commerce platforms, and social media
providers.
Despite the privatized and somewhat autonomous nature of
these network components, global coordination is necessary to
keep the Internet operational. For example, global technical
standardization ensures interoperability; cybersecurity
governance maintains stability and authentication; and
centralized coordination ensures that each Internet name and
number is globally unique. These, and other, tasks necessary
to keep the Internet operational, are collectively referred to
as global Internet governance. As the Internet becomes
increasingly enmeshed with vital aspects of everyday life,
actors that perform these various Internet governance
functions are also being called upon to provide expert
knowledge on the governance of human behaviour online. This
trend complicates an already difficult governance terrain.
For the majority of its history, the Internet has been
governed in an organic and piecemeal fashion by a variety of
standard-setting and other technical bodies and by private
companies performing key roles as network operators and
information intermediaries. Multi-stakeholder governance means
governance involving more than one of the four categories of
participants: firms, states, intergovernmental organizations,
and civil society (including technical experts acting in their
individual capacities). It typically utilizes relatively
non-hierarchical procedural rules. Rather than hard law and
regulatory enforcement, governance is accomplished by means of
voluntary compliance with technical standards, codes of
conduct, and industry best practices.
How will the Global Commission on Internet Governance
influence the debate on Internet governance?
The Global Commissions goal is two-fold. First, it will
encourage globally inclusive public discussions on the future
of Internet governance. It will do this through public
outreach activities, including accessible research as well as
public consultation. Second, through its comprehensive
policy-oriented report, and the subsequent promotion of this
report, the Commission will communicate its findings with
senior stakeholders at key Internet governance events,
including, for example, the World Summit on the Information
Society (WSIS)+10 review process, the Global Multistakeholder
Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance in spring 2014,
and the International Telecommunication Union (ITU)
Plenipotentiary Meeting in fall 2014.
Although the commission will formally begin its program of
work at the conclusion of ICANNs High Level Panel on Internet
Cooperation, which concludes its work in May 2014, planning
and research are well underway. The commission will tackle a
broad range of issues through an intensive program of research
and consultation over an extended, two-year period.
Commissioners
Carl Bildt - Chair
Gordon Smith - Deputy Chair
Dominic Barton
Pablo Bello
Dae-Whan Chang
Moez Chatchouk
Michael Chertoff
Anriette Esterhuysen
Hartmut Glaser
Dorothy Gordon
Dame Wendy Hall
Fen Osler Hampson
Melissa Hathaway
Patricia Lewis
Mathias Müller von Blumencron
Beth Simone Noveck
Joseph S. Nye
Sir David Omand
Nii Quaynor
Latha Reddy
Marietje Schaake
Tobby Simon
Michael Spence
Paul Twomey
Pindar Wong
--
Pranesh Prakash
Policy Director, Centre for Internet and Society
T: +91
80 40926283 | W: http://cis-india.org
-------------------
Access to Knowledge Fellow, Information Society Project,
Yale Law School
M: +1
520 314 7147 | W: http://yaleisp.org
PGP ID: 0x1D5C5F07 | Twitter: https://twitter.com/pranesh_prakash