[WSIS CS-Plenary] Civil Society Priorities Document
artur
artur at ac.upc.es
Mon Jul 14 11:48:01 BST 2003
I suport the Adam's suggestion to delete the paragraph.
The Civil Society Priorities should include the priorities of its members
organizations.
I understand that Adam speaks in the name of the civil society part of
ICANN. The respect of each of the Civil Society voices and expertises will
facilitate the voices of all
If you want to include some paragraph in relation with "the current
management of Internet names and numbers
and other related mechanisms" you could indicate that "the role of the
civil society should be reinforce in the current mechanisms in light of
serving public interests and compatibility with human rights standards."
Regards
Artur Serra
UPC, Barcelona
----- Original Message -----
From: "Adam Peake" <ajp at glocom.ac.jp>
To: <plenary at wsis-cs.org>; <ct at wsis-cs.org>
Cc: <governance at lists.cpsr.org>; <bkleinwaechter at web.de>; <izumi at anr.org>;
<schock at asc.upenn.edu>
Sent: Monday, July 14, 2003 11:36 AM
Subject: RE: [WSIS CS-Plenary] Civil Society Priorities Document
> The paragraph should be deleted.
>
> ICANN is far from perfect. It's policy making structures are not as
> open as we would like. I've been involved in "Internet Governance"
> for 6 or 7 years. Izumi and I were members of the only consistent
> civil society effort that tried to defend the right to election and
> direct representation -- so please do not think I am some kind of
> ICANN apologist.
>
> While ICANN is not the organization we hoped it would be, its policy
> making processes are quite open to Civil Society (certainly compared
> to the alternatives.) We can and do have a direct influence (I know,
> I've done it.) And recent changes to ICANN policy making processes
> indicate that there will be more opportunities in the future, not
> less. If we were in a debating hall I would be more than happy to
> stand up and list problems with ICANN.
>
> But this week, all this is besides the point. It's not the issue. We
> are here reacting to an effort by some governments to take control of
> Internet naming and addressing. They believe they should have
> sovereign rights not only to TLDs but to IP address allocation and to
> control of the root server system (read the working documents and
> contributions.) Other governments want to see these functions become
> the responsibility of an "inter-governmental organization." It is
> quite clear that the organization they are thinking of is the ITU.
>
> What's at stake this week is very simple. Will the draft documents
> support the status quo, ICANN? Or will they support change? By asking
> for "re-examination" we will support change. Governments like Syria
> will take us as supporting their efforts. Governments and the ITU
> will use our words to their advantage. There is no plan C. There is
> nothing other than the two options. If you want to risk supporting
> ITU and government control of Internet naming and addressing, leave
> the paragraph in place.
>
> I very strongly request that **the paragraph should be deleted.**
>
> Many thanks,
>
> Adam
>
>
>
> At 9:58 PM -0400 7/13/03, Sasha Costanza-Chock wrote:
> >I'm not so sure, Adam...do you feel that the current management of
internet
> >names and addresses is the best system for allocating what is essentially
a
> >global commons, in the public interest? If so, please explain why a
> >byzantine structure like ICANN, geared towards corporate needs, is the
best
> >system. If not, it seems entirely appropriate to raise the question.
> >
> >sasha costanza-chock
> >
> >
> >>From: Adam Peake
> >>I request that the following paragraph be deleted from the Civil
> >>Society Priorities Document:
> >
> >> >"To these ends, the current management of Internet names and numbers
> >and other related mechanisms should be re-examined with the full
> >participation of all stakeholders in light of serving public
> >interests and compatibility with human rights standards."
> >It can only serve to support the arguments of governments that wish
> >to gain control over Internet resource allocation, and others hoping
> >to see the ITU or some other inter-governmental organization take
> >control of Internet naming and addressing.
> >
> >It should be deleted.
> >
> >Kind regards,
> >
> >Adam Peake
> >GLOCOM Tokyo
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >
> >--
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>
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