Re: [At-Large] [EURO-Discuss] VOTE RESULTS: 2014 At-Large Board Director (Seat #15) Selection Process
Hi On Mar 30, 2014, at 11:32 AM, Kleinwächter, Wolfgang <wolfgang.kleinwaechter@medienkomm.uni-halle.de> wrote:
Hi,
I also want to join the many thanks to Sebastian (great job), to Rinalia (great challenge) and Roberto and Tijani (well done). Nothing more to add what Veronica has said so nicely and well structured.
+1
Here we have to invest more how to do this and to go out of our silos both within the broader CS community (in particular with NCUC and NPOC)
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much. Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well. Bill
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees. I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable. I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program. Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this. - Evan
Hi Evan I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang’s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session. Best Bill On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
- Evan _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
*********************************************** William J. Drake International Fellow & Lecturer Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ University of Zurich, Switzerland Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency, ICANN, www.ncuc.org william.drake@uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake@gmail.com (lists), www.williamdrake.org ***********************************************
Hi Bill, Evan and all, I agree with you that improved collaboration between ALAC, NCUC, NCSG and "the broader CS community" or "how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible?" would be an important issue for the ATALS II agenda. As we defined some priority areas and subjects in Singapore and will ask the Subject matter experts (SME) for some sub-topics on each, this issue would perfectly fit into / under point 3 and/or 5. 1. The future of multistakeholderism – Adam Peake 2. The globalization of ICANN – Rinaliah Abdul Rahim / Roberto Gaetano 3. Global Internet: The User Perspective – Jean-Jacques Subrenat 4. ICANN Transparency and Accountability – Avri Doria / Hong Xue 5. At-Large Community Engagement in ICANN – Olivier Crépin-Leblond / Mike O'Connor To be followed up during further ATALS II program elaboration and tuning. Thanks and best regards, Wolf William Drake wrote Fri, 4 Apr 2014 10:55:
Hi Evan
I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang’s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session.
Best
Bill
On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
- Evan _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
*********************************************** William J. Drake International Fellow & Lecturer Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ University of Zurich, Switzerland Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency, ICANN, www.ncuc.org william.drake@uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake@gmail.com (lists), www.williamdrake.org ***********************************************
_______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
EuroDIG Secretariat http://www.eurodig.org/ mobile +41 79 204 83 87 Skype: Wolf-Ludwig EURALO - ICANN's Regional At-Large Organisation http://euralo.org Profile on LinkedIn http://ch.linkedin.com/in/wolfludwig
Hi all, for us to remember the WORKING DEFINITION ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE: Internet governance is the development and application by Governments, the private sector and civil society, in their respective roles, of shared principles, norms, rules, decision-making procedures, and programmes that shape the evolution and use of the Internet. Now that we have a concrete task ahead (IANA transition), we have to bring this definition alive, more than ever before. The role of CS was and is widely discussed, but it is still not 100% clear how this role will look like in practice. The kick start meeting in Singapore without CS on stage was not the best start, but once can consider this a cosmetic issue. However in the near future CS should be very clear on how we think to contribute to the global process. We should work out a concrete action plan (ALAC, NCUC, NCSG, ...) otherwise I fear we are not heard. IGF-D took place last Wednesday in Berlin and the role of CS was the hot topic there and I am sure it will remain on the agenda during some other upcoming events (EuroDIG, ATLAS II....). Maybe we can consider an answer (or thesis, message) on that matter as a possible outcome of ATLAS II? My two cents Sandra -----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Wolf Ludwig Gesendet: Freitag, 4. April 2014 17:44 An: At-Large Worldwide; William Drake Cc: Kleinwächter, Wolfgang Betreff: Re: [At-Large] [EURO-Discuss] VOTE RESULTS: 2014 At-Large Board Director (Seat #15) Selection Process Hi Bill, Evan and all, I agree with you that improved collaboration between ALAC, NCUC, NCSG and "the broader CS community" or "how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible?" would be an important issue for the ATALS II agenda. As we defined some priority areas and subjects in Singapore and will ask the Subject matter experts (SME) for some sub-topics on each, this issue would perfectly fit into / under point 3 and/or 5. 1. The future of multistakeholderism – Adam Peake 2. The globalization of ICANN – Rinaliah Abdul Rahim / Roberto Gaetano 3. Global Internet: The User Perspective – Jean-Jacques Subrenat 4. ICANN Transparency and Accountability – Avri Doria / Hong Xue 5. At-Large Community Engagement in ICANN – Olivier Crépin-Leblond / Mike O'Connor To be followed up during further ATALS II program elaboration and tuning. Thanks and best regards, Wolf William Drake wrote Fri, 4 Apr 2014 10:55:
Hi Evan
I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang’s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session.
Best
Bill
On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
- Evan _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
*********************************************** William J. Drake International Fellow & Lecturer Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ University of Zurich, Switzerland Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency, ICANN, www.ncuc.org william.drake@uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake@gmail.com (lists), www.williamdrake.org ***********************************************
_______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
EuroDIG Secretariat http://www.eurodig.org/ mobile +41 79 204 83 87 Skype: Wolf-Ludwig EURALO - ICANN's Regional At-Large Organisation http://euralo.org Profile on LinkedIn http://ch.linkedin.com/in/wolfludwig _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
Hi We have two separate conversations going under the same header so I propose splitting this one off. On Apr 4, 2014, at 6:29 PM, sandra hoferichter <info@hoferichter.eu> wrote: snipping
Now that we have a concrete task ahead (IANA transition), we have to bring this definition alive, more than ever before. The role of CS was and is widely discussed, but it is still not 100% clear how this role will look like in practice. The kick start meeting in Singapore without CS on stage was not the best start, but once can consider this a cosmetic issue. However in the near future CS should be very clear on how we think to contribute to the global process. We should work out a concrete action plan (ALAC, NCUC, NCSG, ...) otherwise I fear we are not heard.
I think Sandra’s point can be generalized. On a lot of issues of relevance to civil society advocates of public interest / user concerns, one could argue we are both underrepresented at the table and losing on outcomes on a fairly systematic basis. Processes and outcomes are being shaped by more influential groups in the community (representing their own legitimate interests), while the substantial civil society presence is fragmented and somewhat preoccupied with tending it’s respective silos rather than collaborating to put forward viable alternatives with the sort of cross-comm support that’s not easy to dismiss. Absent effective checking and balancing influence and compromise solutions, it’s easy to end up with an externally trumpeted MS model that that in reality doesn’t reflect a balance between all views.
Von: at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Wolf Ludwig Gesendet: Freitag, 4. April 2014 17:44
Hi Bill, Evan and all,
I agree with you that improved collaboration between ALAC, NCUC, NCSG and "the broader CS community" or "how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible?" would be an important issue for the ATALS II agenda. As we defined some priority areas and subjects in Singapore and will ask the Subject matter experts (SME) for some sub-topics on each, this issue would perfectly fit into / under point 3 and/or 5.
1. The future of multistakeholderism – Adam Peake 2. The globalization of ICANN – Rinaliah Abdul Rahim / Roberto Gaetano 3. Global Internet: The User Perspective – Jean-Jacques Subrenat 4. ICANN Transparency and Accountability – Avri Doria / Hong Xue 5. At-Large Community Engagement in ICANN – Olivier Crépin-Leblond / Mike O’Connor
Ok. One also could argue that what we are talking about goes direct to heart of point 1, e.g. what’s the future of multistakeholderism if some stakeholders are always more equal than others with respect to organization, access, support, and outcomes. It also goes to the meaning of globalization, especially with respect to the engagement of the world beyond WEOG, where civil society participants tend to outweigh business participants at meetings. And it equally speaks to transparency and accountability, e.g. to whom, and what is needed to ensure this is broad-based. So the question seems pretty “meta” and relevant across the agenda. Best, Bill
William Drake wrote Fri, 4 Apr 2014 10:55:
Hi Evan
I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang’s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session.
Best
Bill
On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
- Evan _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
*********************************************** William J. Drake International Fellow & Lecturer Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ University of Zurich, Switzerland Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency, ICANN, www.ncuc.org william.drake@uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake@gmail.com (lists), www.williamdrake.org ***********************************************
William. Thank you for splitting this thread. I agree with you Sandra's point can be generalised. One huge barrier for indirect stakeholders is the technocratic management layer discussion at ICANN which is focussed on the needs of direct stakeholders. If you are not resourced to participate in that you are having to wade through a huge amount of detail to get to the "governance" nuggets you've invested so much to turn up to get across. Challenge is finding how to bring "governance" into "management" decisions in a scalable way. One thing to point out in addition. The issues that Adam and Jean-Jacques are addressing go well beyond the remit of ICANN. The question for ICANN I think goes something like this. How to include governance views into the shaping of management policies for the allocation and distribution of Internet resources? The first part of answering that is to work out any governance views. That is why I think the broader footprint in IGF to build some approaches outside ICANN bubble can help indirect stakeholders gather their priorities. (Adam no doubt smiling at my change of mind! but the world has now moved on from 2002/3.) C William Drake wrote:
Hi
We have two separate conversations going under the same header so I propose splitting this one off.
On Apr 4, 2014, at 6:29 PM, sandra hoferichter <info@hoferichter.eu> wrote:
snipping
Now that we have a concrete task ahead (IANA transition), we have to bring this definition alive, more than ever before. The role of CS was and is widely discussed, but it is still not 100% clear how this role will look like in practice. The kick start meeting in Singapore without CS on stage was not the best start, but once can consider this a cosmetic issue. However in the near future CS should be very clear on how we think to contribute to the global process. We should work out a concrete action plan (ALAC, NCUC, NCSG, ...) otherwise I fear we are not heard.
I think Sandra’s point can be generalized. On a lot of issues of relevance to civil society advocates of public interest / user concerns, one could argue we are both underrepresented at the table and losing on outcomes on a fairly systematic basis. Processes and outcomes are being shaped by more influential groups in the community (representing their own legitimate interests), while the substantial civil society presence is fragmented and somewhat preoccupied with tending it’s respective silos rather than collaborating to put forward viable alternatives with the sort of cross-comm support that’s not easy to dismiss. Absent effective checking and balancing influence and compromise solutions, it’s easy to end up with an externally trumpeted MS model that that in reality doesn’t reflect a balance between all views.
Von: at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Wolf Ludwig Gesendet: Freitag, 4. April 2014 17:44
Hi Bill, Evan and all,
I agree with you that improved collaboration between ALAC, NCUC, NCSG and "the broader CS community" or "how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible?" would be an important issue for the ATALS II agenda. As we defined some priority areas and subjects in Singapore and will ask the Subject matter experts (SME) for some sub-topics on each, this issue would perfectly fit into / under point 3 and/or 5.
1. The future of multistakeholderism – Adam Peake 2. The globalization of ICANN – Rinaliah Abdul Rahim / Roberto Gaetano 3. Global Internet: The User Perspective – Jean-Jacques Subrenat 4. ICANN Transparency and Accountability – Avri Doria / Hong Xue 5. At-Large Community Engagement in ICANN – Olivier Crépin-Leblond / Mike O’Connor
Ok. One also could argue that what we are talking about goes direct to heart of point 1, e.g. what’s the future of multistakeholderism if some stakeholders are always more equal than others with respect to organization, access, support, and outcomes. It also goes to the meaning of globalization, especially with respect to the engagement of the world beyond WEOG, where civil society participants tend to outweigh business participants at meetings. And it equally speaks to transparency and accountability, e.g. to whom, and what is needed to ensure this is broad-based. So the question seems pretty “meta” and relevant across the agenda.
Best,
Bill
William Drake wrote Fri, 4 Apr 2014 10:55:
Hi Evan
I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang’s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session.
Best
Bill
On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much. In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
- Evan _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
William J. Drake International Fellow & Lecturer Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ University of Zurich, Switzerland Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency, ICANN, www.ncuc.org william.drake@uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake@gmail.com (lists), www.williamdrake.org ***********************************************
_______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
Sandra, As a participant in the ICANN processes through an At-Large Structure, one representing individual Internet users, I'm curious about that "WORKING DEFINITION ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE." Where does it come from? Tom Lowenhaupt On 4/4/2014 12:29 PM, sandra hoferichter wrote:
Hi all,
for us to remember the WORKING DEFINITION ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE: Internet governance is the development and application by Governments, the private sector and civil society, in their respective roles, of shared principles, norms, rules, decision-making procedures, and programmes that shape the evolution and use of the Internet.
Now that we have a concrete task ahead (IANA transition), we have to bring this definition alive, more than ever before. The role of CS was and is widely discussed, but it is still not 100% clear how this role will look like in practice. The kick start meeting in Singapore without CS on stage was not the best start, but once can consider this a cosmetic issue. However in the near future CS should be very clear on how we think to contribute to the global process. We should work out a concrete action plan (ALAC, NCUC, NCSG, ...) otherwise I fear we are not heard.
IGF-D took place last Wednesday in Berlin and the role of CS was the hot topic there and I am sure it will remain on the agenda during some other upcoming events (EuroDIG, ATLAS II....). Maybe we can consider an answer (or thesis, message) on that matter as a possible outcome of ATLAS II?
My two cents
Sandra
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Wolf Ludwig Gesendet: Freitag, 4. April 2014 17:44 An: At-Large Worldwide; William Drake Cc: Kleinwächter, Wolfgang Betreff: Re: [At-Large] [EURO-Discuss] VOTE RESULTS: 2014 At-Large Board Director (Seat #15) Selection Process
Hi Bill, Evan and all,
I agree with you that improved collaboration between ALAC, NCUC, NCSG and "the broader CS community" or "how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible?" would be an important issue for the ATALS II agenda. As we defined some priority areas and subjects in Singapore and will ask the Subject matter experts (SME) for some sub-topics on each, this issue would perfectly fit into / under point 3 and/or 5.
1. The future of multistakeholderism – Adam Peake 2. The globalization of ICANN – Rinaliah Abdul Rahim / Roberto Gaetano 3. Global Internet: The User Perspective – Jean-Jacques Subrenat 4. ICANN Transparency and Accountability – Avri Doria / Hong Xue 5. At-Large Community Engagement in ICANN – Olivier Crépin-Leblond / Mike O'Connor
To be followed up during further ATALS II program elaboration and tuning. Thanks and
best regards, Wolf
William Drake wrote Fri, 4 Apr 2014 10:55:
Hi Evan
I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang’s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session.
Best
Bill
On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We’ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn’t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I’d think it’d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
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Dear Tom,
From the Report of the Working Group on Internet Governance
Château de Bossey June 2005 Page 4 http://www.wgig.org/WGIG-Report.html Sébastien Bachollet +33 6 07 66 89 33 Blog: http://sebastien.bachollet.fr/ Mail: Sébastien Bachollet <sebastien@bachollet.com> Le 06/04/2014 08:40, « Thomas Lowenhaupt » <toml@communisphere.com> a écrit :
Sandra,
As a participant in the ICANN processes through an At-Large Structure, one representing individual Internet users, I'm curious about that "WORKING DEFINITION ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE." Where does it come from?
Tom Lowenhaupt
On 4/4/2014 12:29 PM, sandra hoferichter wrote:
Hi all,
for us to remember the WORKING DEFINITION ON INTERNET GOVERNANCE: Internet governance is the development and application by Governments, the private sector and civil society, in their respective roles, of shared principles, norms, rules, decision-making procedures, and programmes that shape the evolution and use of the Internet.
Now that we have a concrete task ahead (IANA transition), we have to bring this definition alive, more than ever before. The role of CS was and is widely discussed, but it is still not 100% clear how this role will look like in practice. The kick start meeting in Singapore without CS on stage was not the best start, but once can consider this a cosmetic issue. However in the near future CS should be very clear on how we think to contribute to the global process. We should work out a concrete action plan (ALAC, NCUC, NCSG, ...) otherwise I fear we are not heard.
IGF-D took place last Wednesday in Berlin and the role of CS was the hot topic there and I am sure it will remain on the agenda during some other upcoming events (EuroDIG, ATLAS II....). Maybe we can consider an answer (or thesis, message) on that matter as a possible outcome of ATLAS II?
My two cents
Sandra
-----Ursprüngliche Nachricht----- Von: at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org [mailto:at-large-bounces@atlarge-lists.icann.org] Im Auftrag von Wolf Ludwig Gesendet: Freitag, 4. April 2014 17:44 An: At-Large Worldwide; William Drake Cc: Kleinwächter, Wolfgang Betreff: Re: [At-Large] [EURO-Discuss] VOTE RESULTS: 2014 At-Large Board Director (Seat #15) Selection Process
Hi Bill, Evan and all,
I agree with you that improved collaboration between ALAC, NCUC, NCSG and "the broader CS community" or "how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible?" would be an important issue for the ATALS II agenda. As we defined some priority areas and subjects in Singapore and will ask the Subject matter experts (SME) for some sub-topics on each, this issue would perfectly fit into / under point 3 and/or 5.
1. The future of multistakeholderism Adam Peake 2. The globalization of ICANN Rinaliah Abdul Rahim / Roberto Gaetano 3. Global Internet: The User Perspective Jean-Jacques Subrenat 4. ICANN Transparency and Accountability Avri Doria / Hong Xue 5. At-Large Community Engagement in ICANN Olivier Crépin-Leblond / Mike O'Connor
To be followed up during further ATALS II program elaboration and tuning. Thanks and
best regards, Wolf
William Drake wrote Fri, 4 Apr 2014 10:55:
Hi Evan
I agree with your point re: a common agenda of specific policy issues being key to past successful dialogues. And we could indeed try to focus that way again if one wants. But actually I was responding to Wolfgang¹s broader point about how user-oriented groups are institutionally siloed and whether some sort of pan-ICANN coordination could be feasible. Of course, that At Large is not only noncommercial users and is declaredly not a civil society network per se presents some complications there, but it still could be an element, if not the singular focus, of an agenda for a joint session.
Best
Bill
On Apr 4, 2014, at 9:52 AM, Evan Leibovitch <evan@telly.org> wrote:
On 4 April 2014 02:40, William Drake <wjdrake@gmail.com> wrote:
We¹ve had liaisons, joint meetings, and periodic informal discussions about 'the broader CS community' for some time, but the latter bit has not really progressed much.
In my personal experience, things go well when there is a specific common agenda. Consider that the CCWG on Internet Governance -- an initiative sprung out of the ALAC/NCSG meeting in Buenos Aires and co-chaired by Olivier and Rafik -- collected enough steam community-wide to be cited as a reason for the dissolution of the Board Special Committees.
I'd certainly call that a win. So we know it's doable.
I find other areas of collaboration possible as ALAC starts exploring privacy issues more (the Singapore workshop we held on TOR was surprisingly well attended and may likely be repeated). OTOH, I might hope that NCSG -- at least some bits of it -- might find common ground with, for instance, the intense At-Large dissatisfaction with the utility and enforceability of Public Interest Commitments as they exist now in the new gTLD program.
Wouldn¹t this be a worthy topic for some drill down discussion in the
context of https://community.icann.org/display/atlarge/ATLAS+II+Draft+Agenda ? It would be of particular interest to those of us with feet on both sides of the lines, but I¹d think it¹d also be of wider interest as well.
Wolf is involved with identifying Subject Matter Experts for the various thematic sessions being done as part of the ATLAS program. Have a talk with him; there's room for this.
- Evan _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
William J. Drake International Fellow & Lecturer Media Change & Innovation Division, IPMZ University of Zurich, Switzerland Chair, Noncommercial Users Constituency, ICANN, www.ncuc.org william.drake@uzh.ch (direct), wjdrake@gmail.com (lists), www.williamdrake.org ***********************************************
_______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
At-Large Official Site: http://atlarge.icann.org
EuroDIG Secretariat http://www.eurodig.org/ mobile +41 79 204 83 87 Skype: Wolf-Ludwig
EURALO - ICANN's Regional At-Large Organisation http://euralo.org
Profile on LinkedIn http://ch.linkedin.com/in/wolfludwig _______________________________________________ At-Large mailing list At-Large@atlarge-lists.icann.org https://atlarge-lists.icann.org/mailman/listinfo/at-large
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participants (7)
-
Christian de Larrinaga -
Evan Leibovitch -
sandra hoferichter -
Sébastien Bachollet -
Thomas Lowenhaupt -
William Drake -
Wolf Ludwig