Fwd: Internet Governance news
Milton Mueller
Mueller at SYR.EDU
Tue Aug 22 20:26:31 CEST 2006
======================================
Internet Governance Project Newsletter
======================================
...current events in Internet Governance and the activities of the
Internet Governance Project.
http://www.internetgovernance.org
Volume 1.03
August 22, 2006
========
Contents
========
[1] ICANN Gets IANA Again, US Keeps Control [2] IGF Undergoes First
Major Test [3] IGP Proposes IGF Workshops [4] DoC Ignores the Rest
of
World [5] Civil Society Converges on IGF [6] IGP launches Chinese
website [7] Net neutrality work at OECD
=====================================
[1] ICANN Gets IANA Again, US Keeps Control (This is news?)
=====================================
The US government on Wednesday announced its renewal of the IANA
contract with ICANN for a one-year period, with an option for four
more
years. Many news reports about this event were inaccurate, confusing
the IANA contract with the Department of Commerce Memorandum of
Understanding that provides oversight for ICANN's policy making
functions. For an informed report from IGP on the substance and
significance of this development, click here.
<http://internetgovernance.org/news.html#ianarenewal_082206>
=======================================
[2] The IGF Undergoes First Major Test
=======================================
The new Internet Governance Forum's agenda has proven to be so generic
(Openness, Access Diversity, Security) that no one knows what will
transpire in its Plenary sessions. The real agenda-setting action
will
be in the Forum's parallel "workshops," 90-minute sessions on
particular topics. The workshop proposals force stakeholder groups to
work together, and the review and selection of the proposals forces
the
IGF to make decisions. Workshops are thus the first big test of the
viability of the multistakeholder model and the capacity and
impartiality of the Secretariat and its Advisory Group. There may be
pressure from some interest groups to avoid certain topics deemed
sensitive or controversial -- but if the IGF cannot discuss the real
issues of Internet Governance, what is the point of its existence?
The
deadline for Workshop proposals is August 24, and decisions about which
ones are accepted are expected by mid-September.
==============================
[3] IGP Proposes IGF Workshops
==============================
Co-sponsoring with the Government of Brazil and the Third World
Network, IGP has proposed a Workshop on "New Technical and Policy
Challenges in DNS Root Zone Management." The workshop will feature
two
root server operators (VeriSign and Sweden's Autonomica), an IETF
DNSSEC expert, developing world governments, and policy analysts.
Recent
technical developments pose a number of new problems for root zone
management that need to be discussed. The workshop will focus on
three
of these issues: 1) the attempt to secure DNS via DNSSEC; 2) new
applications such as IDNs, IPv6 and ENUM; 3) proposals to multi-
lateralize root zone oversight. IGP is also proposing a workshop on
free
expression that will feature U.S. Ambassador David Gross, civil
society
advocacy groups, and governmental representatives.
======================================
[4] IGP Campaign on Root Control Shifts Opinion
======================================
A global email campaign by IGP generated comments from 32 countries in
seven regions, including Asia, Africa, North & South America, the
Caribbean and the Middle East against continued unilateral U.S.
control
of the DNS root. While IGP's official filing offered a detailed
rationale for that position, the IGP website provided a simple means
for
individual Internet users to transmit that message to the USG. And
according The Register (UK), half of the comments critical of the USG,
including several from ccTLD operators and others in the technical
community, incorporated the IGP language. In the final analysis, 87%
of
relevant comments received called for transition toward a new model of
governance. However, while public response this lopsided would make
any
reasonable public-steward think twice, the DOC recently renewed its
continued authority over the IANA function via ICANN, the key point of
leverage for DNS root control.
==================================
[5] Civil Society Converges on IGF
==================================
About 20 members of civil society advocacy groups and several
government representatives attended a special experts meeting on the
Internet Governance Forum in Geneva July 20-21. The meeting was
organized by the Consumer Project on Technology, the Third World
Network
and the South Centre. IGP's Milton Mueller and Jeanette Hofmann were
invited participants. Also among the attendees were IGF MAG member
Robin Gross of IPJustice; Markus Kummer and Chengetai Masango of the
IGF Secretariat; scholars William Drake and Michael Froomkin; Yale
ISP
Director Eddan Katz; CP Tech director James Love; Georg Greve of the
European Free Software Foundation; Heather Ford of iCommons; Carlos
Affonso de Souza of iCommons Brazil. IGP partner Milton Mueller
claimed
that the meeting was "the first real strategic intersection of
Internet
governance and A2K (Access to Knowledge) activists." The group had
fruitful discussions with the IGF Secretariat on the function of the
Forum; e.g., the difference between "binding" documents and norm
negotiation, and discussing problems vs. developing solutions
collectively, and on the suitable criteria for submitting papers and
workshop proposals.
================================
[6] IGP launches Chinese website
================================
The Internet Governance Project announced today that its website is
now
available in Chinese. "We view it essential that one of the world's
largest Internet user community have access to the global debate on
Internet governance," said IGP Operations Director Brenden Kuerbis.
"In
anticipation of the upcoming Internet Governance Forum, all
individuals, the private sector and governments must have access to
objective analysis of issues of freedom of expression, content
filtering, and competition policy surrounding critical network
resources." While only providing limited translation at this point,
IGP
plans to publish translations of key papers prior to the Forum.
===============================
[7] Net neutrality work at OECD
===============================
During the month of September IGP partner Milton Mueller will be in
Paris working as a visiting scholar at the OECD. He plans to develop
a
paper there on the application of WTO reference paper principles to
Internet interconnection issues.
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