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Re: [ga] ALAC Statement on WSIS Declaration of Principles and Plan of Actions















At 08:30 22/01/04, Karl Auerbach wrote:
On Wed, 21 Jan 2004, Vittorio Bertola wrote:
> This statement has just been released by the ALAC. Comments or questions
> are welcome.

I'm sorry that I can't support the statement as it is not in accord with
my strongly held belief that the fundamental unit of sovreignty is not the
"private sector" but the individual human being.

Amen. "private sector" is here only a way to name "stakeholders" when faking the civil society.

I would only add that human beeings are entitled to human e-rights that should be defined first. These e-rights includes naming and teaching, electonic presence and surety, right to send and broadcast, right to receive and to not receive, right to own and to associate. This is to result into supporting network systems architectures and into their concerted adequate management.

Today IAB has not been able to propose such an architecture nor ICANN to animate such a management. The result is the progressive mental saturation of the users (spam, worms) and of the governance structure (denial of thinking by value removed complexity).

There are many diferent interests to support this strategy by the network dominance : their common target is to prevent evolutions in the proper directions. This is named status quo and is said to be stability and security. Statbility by lock of innovation, security for the stakeholders.

The WSIS propositions have been worked and voted to express a wish for international equal Government authority, to protect the rights of their citizens and individual end users and obtain transparency.

However this may be a devil trap.

The ITU is both the solution and the danger. It is a solution for 136 years for the Governments to reach their target from telex to telephone. It is a trap because today the only availble welcome structure there is the ITU-T. Precisely the home of the "stakeholders".

The urgency is therefore to use the WSIS momentum to initiate an ITU-I. Where "I" stands for Inteligence, Internet and - why not - ICANN. The mere fact that ICANN is not the leading party in the http://i-sector.org effort (or other similar ones) shows that ICANN (and unfortunately its affiliate structures such the mislead, non representative yet talented ALAC) is not able today to free itself from the control of the "stakeholders".

But we all know for years that mission creep is a smoke screen for power grab.
I would love to work with ICANN, but ICANN does not want to protect me. So...
jfc



To the extent that national governments are ordained and established by
the people those governments are worthy of far more respect as the voice
of those people than are arbitrarily defined groups of "stakeholders".

Few, if any, truly democratic governments have ever dared to place as many
layers of insulation between their seats of authority and their citizenry
as ICANN has placed between itself and the community of internet users.
We should not delude outselves into a belief that the mechanisms that
ICANN has created for public participation are in any way adequate.

(I note in passing that the the ALAC statement asserts that ICANN's role
be "limited to technical matters".  Given that ICANN has engaged almost
exclusively in the regulation of business processes, the ALAC statement is
suggesting that the ICANN that is desired is nearly the opposite of that
which exists.  That is an opinion with which I quite agree.)

                --karl--