“One Internet”: Final Report of Global Commission on Internet Governance Published
From the Global Commission’s Launch Announcement:
Imagine not being able to connect with people or access information on the Internet from wherever you are in the world. Or imagine private interests or governments having unfettered access to your personal information. And what if the three billion people currently offline remain unconnected and can’t do business or even seek out information on the Internet? These may be worst-case scenarios, but if we don’t act now the future of an inclusive, open, secure and trustworthy Internet is at risk.
The need to address these problems is the central message of One Internet, the final report and recommendations of the Global Commission on Internet Governance (Commission), released today at the OECD Ministerial Meeting on the Digital Economy in Cancun, Mexico. Chaired by former Swedish Prime Minister Carl Bildt, the Commission’s report contains a series of concrete recommendations crucial to ensuring the Internet’s promised future of greater digital freedom, security, trustworthiness and accessibility for all.
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One Internet addresses a range of issues related to Internet governance. Most importantly, the Commission highlights the need for all parts of society to achieve a new social compact as the basis for Internet governance. The social compact must include principles such as:
- Governments should not require third parties to weaken or compromise encryption standards through hidden “backdoors” into technology.
- Companies should not become the enforcement arm of governments. Private actors should publish transparency reports that reveal the amount of content being restricted or blocked in response to requests by governments, along with how and why it is being blocked.
- Governments should negotiate a list of targets that are off-limits to cyber-attacks.
- Consumers should be free to choose the services they use, and should have greater say in how their personal data is used by those “free” service providers for commercial purposes. They should not be excluded from using software or services customary because they have concerns about how their personal data will be used.
- Insurance markets must rise to the challenge of ensuring that best practices for data protection and security are appropriately rewarded.
- Because of their impact on human behaviour and opinion, governments, civil society and the private sector need to come together to understand the effects of algorithms on the content available to us online.
- There should be continued evolution in open, broadly-based multi-stakeholder Internet governance process to ensure one, unified global Internet.
- The Commission is a two-year initiative of the Centre for International Governance Innovation (CIGI) and Chatham House, two independent think tanks who convened 29 commissioners and 45 research advisers to articulate and advance a strategic vision for Internet governance.
Resources
- Direct to Full Text Report
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Filed under: Data Files, News, Reports
About Gary Price
Gary Price (gprice@gmail.com) is a librarian, writer, consultant, and frequent conference speaker based in the Washington D.C. metro area. He earned his MLIS degree from Wayne State University in Detroit. Price has won several awards including the SLA Innovations in Technology Award and Alumnus of the Year from the Wayne St. University Library and Information Science Program. From 2006-2009 he was Director of Online Information Services at Ask.com.