Regime Change on the Internet: Conference Notes

By Robert Guerra
Robert Guerra

"Regime Change on the Internet? Internet Governance after WGIG" was the first public event held in the United States on July 28, 2005 to review the UN Working Group on Internet Governance (WGIG) report. Here are my notes from the event:

"What the UN Working Group Proposed"

Markus Kummer, Executive Coordinator, UN Working Group on Internet Governance, reminded the audience that the mandate of the WGIG was specifically articulated by the first part of the WSIS - "To investigate and make proposals for action as appropriate". It was not for sweeping regime change as the conference title would suggest.

Kummer presented a high level overview of the WGIG report. Specific references were made to the following sections:

Recommendations:

Again reminded those attending the event that the mandate of the WGIG was not to suggest change, however the members of the WG felt it "important" to make recommendations:






Way Forward

"The US Perspective on Internet Governance and WSIS"

Richard Beaird, Senior Deputy U.S. Coordinator, US State Department, Communication and Information Policy section:

Introductory Comments:


Key Themes:

1. USG has a central role to play.


2. Internet Governance - What are we talking about ?

3. Public Policy Issues

4. Summary:
Full event notes and further comments on the WGIS Report available on Privaterra blog.

By Robert Guerra, Managing Director, Privaterra

Related topics: DNS, ICANN, Internet Governance, Multilinguism, Privacy, Security

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Comments

Re: Regime Change on the Internet: Conference Notes terastra  –  Aug 17, 2005 6:26 PM PDT

"Roles & Responsibilities of all stakeholders"

Note the wording.

Not "Rights and Responsibilities".

Responsibilities are laid down, but nobody is about to formulate a Bill of Rights for individual Domian Name holders or content publishers on the internet.

Until then, Individual stakeholders have little to expect from the WSIS process.