1. Internet Governance Principles
NETmundial identified a set of common principles and important values that may contribute for an inclusive, multistakeholder, effective, legitimate, and evolving Internet governance framework.
HUMAN RIGHTS
Human rights are central values and universal as reflected in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and that should underpin Internet governance principles. Rights that people have offline must also be protected online, in accordance with international human rights legal obligations, including the International Covenants on Civil and Political Rights and Economic, Social and Cultural Rights. Those rights include, but are not limited to:
- Freedom of expression: everyone has the right to hold and express opinions, and to seek, receive, and impart information on the Internet without arbitrary interference.
- Freedom of association: peaceful assembly online, including through social networks and platforms.
- Privacy: the same rights that people have off-line must also be protected online, including the right to privacy, avoiding arbitrary or unlawful collection of personal data and surveillance and the right to the protection of the law against such interference.
- Accessibility: persons with disabilities should enjoy full access to online resources on an equal basis with others.
- Freedom of information and access to information: Everyone should have the right to access, share, create and distribute information on the Internet.
- Development: all people have a right to development and the Internet has a vital role to play in helping to achieve the full realization of internationally agreed sustainable development goals. It is a vital tool for giving people living in poverty the means to participate in development processes.
Culture and linguistic diversity
Internet governance must respect and promote cultural and linguistic diversity in all its forms.
Unified and unfragmented space
Internet should continue to be a globally coherent, interconnected, stable, unfragmented, scalable and accessible network-of-networks, based on a common set of unique identifiers and that allows the free flow of data packets/information.
Security, stability and resilience of the Internet
Security, stability and resilience of the Internet should be a key objective of all stakeholders in Internet governance. As a universal global resource, the Internet should remain a secure, stable, resilient, and trustworthy network. Effectiveness in addressing risks and threats to security and stability of the Internet depends on strong cooperation among different stakeholders.
Open and distributed architecture
The Internet should be preserved as a fertile and innovative environment based on an open system architecture, with voluntary collaboration, collective stewardship and participation, recognizing technical management principles for efficient and improved network operation and preserving the end-to-end nature of the network, equal technical treatment of all protocols and data, delivered by the underlying communications and seeking to resolve technical issues at a level closest to their origin.
Enabling environment for innovation and creativity
The ability to innovate and create has been at the heart of the remarkable growth of the Internet and it has brought great value to the global society. For the preservation of its dynamism, Internet governance must continue to allow permissionless innovation through an enabling Internet environment.
- Multistakeholder: with the full participation of governments, the private sector, civil society, the technical community, academia and the users in their respective roles and responsibilities.
- Open, participative, consensus driven governance: The development of international Internet-related public policies and Internet governance arrangements should enable the full and balanced participation of all stakeholders from around the globe, and made by consensus.
- Transparent: Decisions made must be easy to understand, processes must be clearly documented and follow agreed procedures, and procedures must be developed and agreed upon through multistakeholder processes.
- Accountable: Mechanisms for checks and balances as well as for review should exist.
- Inclusive and equitable: Internet governance institutions and processes should be inclusive and open to all interested stakeholders. Processes should be bottom-up, enabling the full involvement of all stakeholders, in a way that does not disadvantage any category of stakeholder.
- Distributed: Governance characterized by distributed and multistakeholder mechanisms and organizations.
- Collaborative: Internet governance should be based on and encourage collaborative and cooperative approaches that reflect the inputs and interests of stakeholders.
- Enabling meaningful participation: Anyone affected by an Internet governance process should be able to participate in that process. Particularly, Internet governance institutions and processes should support capacity building for newcomers, especially stakeholders from developing countries and underrepresented groups.
- Accessibility and low barriers: Internet governance should promote universal, equal opportunity, affordable and high quality Internet access so it can be an effective tool for enabling human development and social inclusion. There should be no unreasonable barriers to entry for new users.
- Agility: Policies for access to Internet services should be future oriented and technology neutral, so that they are able to accommodate rapidly developing technologies and different types of use.
Open standards
Internet governance should promote open standards, informed by individual and collective expertise and practical experience and decisions made by open consensus, that allow for a unique, interoperable, resilient, stable, decentralized, secure, and interconnected network, available to all. Standards must be consistent with human rights and allow development and innovation.
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There is a question arises, whether considered in the preparation of these principles 10 principles of the Declaration of the Committee of Ministers of the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of 21 September 2011?
I think a strong vibrant internet is core to the future of independent artists but that all creative and innovative people need to respect one another’s creative output and the concept of permissionless innovation rejects this notion of respect
Permissionless innovation is about how there are few gatekeepers on the Internet who can erect barriers to entry for Internet application developers and content publishers, to preemptively limit their experimentation and innovation. I do agree that this is not an absolute and that some limits are implied, for the protection of human rights (such as the right to privacy). The use of the phrase “permissionless innovation” does, however, not imply otherwise.
We praise the inclusion of the rights described in paragraphs 3 to 8 but consider it essential to include the right to access to knowledge. We suggest the following formulation:
Everyone has the right to access to knowledge . A Wide-spread access to knowledge and a healthy knowledge commons form the basis for sustainable human development. The internet enables knowledge-sharing and collaborative knowledge-creation. Protection of the interests of creators must occur in a way
consistent with open and free participation in scientific and cultural knowledge flows.
Or end your proposed text with “should seek to strike a fair balance between rewarding creativity and investment on the one hand, and the cultural, civic, health and educational rights of consumers and their economic and social development on the other”.
I agree. Access to knowledge is a very important inclusion
The APC suggests the inclusion of the following principle:
Global public resource: The internet is a common and empowering resource for all people and all stakeholders groups. Its governance should serve the global public interest and place good management, fair use and the evolution of the internet above the interests of any single individual, government or corporation.
The Outer Space Treaty states, “The exploration and use of outer space, including the moon and other celestial bodies, shall be carried out for the benefit and in the interests of all countries, irrespective of their degree of economic or scientific development, and shall be the province of all mankind.” Perhaps this language could be adapted, replacing up to the first comma with “Governance of the Internet” and replacing “countries” above with “stakeholders”.
An overwhelming number of commenters focus on the most significant oversight of this document — the failure to recognize the importance of intellectual property rights and the rule of law in fostering an innovative environment. For the process to be considered inclusive, the outcome document must reflect input from such a major stakeholder group, which includes artists, creators, and the cultural and entertainment industry. Although not incorporated in the draft outcome document, these views were expressed during the first round of comments in a submission by 38 entertainment and cultural organizations, representing 66 countries and six continents.
As a published author, I fully appreciate that IPR should be respected. But in the picture of Internet governance as such, IPR issues constitute a side-issue that should be treated completely separately from the core issues of the Internet itself. I believe that discussing IPR would be a distraction for NETmundial.
Fully agree with this position. Intellectual property on the Internet has been ‘protected’ beyond its legal categorizations and been forced on the network in a way that inhibits the openness of the Internet. There is no need to create new rights for those who attempt to corner the market on information.
This document needs preambular text that states clearly that the reason that common principles and values need to be established is that the internet is a common resource. It is a common public resource, which does not need to imply that governments should have oversight over it. But it does imply that it should be governed in the broadest possible public interest.
Suggested edit of para 1:
NETMundial agreed that the Internet is a common empowering resource for all people and all stakeholder groups. It should not be owned or controlled by any single group or entity and therefore internet governance processes should be inclusive, open and transparent, and enable good management, fair use and the evolution of the internet as a safe and secure platform for economic, social, political and cultural development. To achieve this, Internet governance need to be based on a set of common principles rooted in human rights and the broadest possible public interest.
Contribution prenant en compte la diversité linguistique demandée (voir ma contribution au paragraphe « diversité culturelle et linguistique »)
Contribution taking into account the required linguistic diversity (see my contribution to “culture and linguistic diversity”)
Ce document sur l’avenir de la gouvernance de l’internet établit un certain nombre de principes directeurs que devrait respecter la gouvernance de l’internet. Toutefois il ne décrit pas les leviers, mécanismes et stratégies à mettre en œuvre pour y parvenir.
Cette question devrait à coup sûr être abordée…
This document on the future of the Internet Governance lays down a number of fundamental principles which internet governance should be based upon. However it fails to describe the levers, mechanisms and strategies which will enable to enforce these principles.
This question should clearly be addressed…
We believe that preserving and advancing open and consultative decision-making is essential to ensuring that global citizens are able to take advantage of this transformative platform both now and in the future. As such, we support the following principles which we believe are essential to Internet governance:
• Policies must ensure a safe, secure, open, interoperable, and sustainable Internet.
• Policies must stimulate sustainable investment in and deployment of Internet networks and the industries and services that create demand for those networks.
• Policies must support opening and maintaining international markets in a way that allows for the seamless flow of digital services, applications, products, and information.
• Policies must foster innovation across Internet networks, services, and other sectors in the Internet ecosystem, including ensuring the protection of intellectual property.
• Policies must support increased transparency and openness in intergovernmental organizations and multistakeholder mechanisms, to ensure that all stakeholders can participate meaningfully in key Internet policy discussions. The quality of Internet governance decisions increases when diverse stakeholders choose to actively and consistently participate.
• Policies must support capacity building and implementation of best practices in relation to network security.
• Policies must support the rule of law which governments have primary responsibility for advancing.
In the document as presented I see two notable and even astonishing absences.
1. The document refers to stakeholders/multistakeholderism in its discussions of the global Internet governance model in one form or another 46 times! While on the other hand, the document contains no, and let me repeat, NO references to democracy or democratic governance!
Clearly there is an intent to replace democratic governance with multistakeholder governance. But this issue is not addressed in a forthright manner anywhere in the document.
2. The document nowhere identifies an overall objective for the governance it is discussing. That is, for what purpose or to what end are the governance structures/models being directed?
To put it bluntly is the proposed governance of the Internet being undertaken in support of the “public interest” or in the interests of the individual “stakeholders” among whom of course certain private corporate and national interests/stakes are pre-eminent? Given what is identified in item #1 the answer to this second question would appear to be self-evident.
Who could possibly have imagined that this conference dealing with global (Internet) governance would look to erase the 1000 year evolution of democratic governance in support of the public interest, and replace this with governance by and for “stakeholders” acting in pursuit of their individual and private interests.
We think a strong vibrant internet is core to the future of independent artists but that all creative and innovative people need to respect one another’s creative output and the concept of permissionless innovation rejects this notion of respect. Respect for copyright laws and an artist ability to gain from their creativity is vital to innovation.