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    Ted Byfied
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    Highlights of the ICANNWatch Archive
    (June 1999 - March 2001)


     
    WSIS ICANN - WSIS Worlds Continue to Converge
    posted by Mueller on Saturday December 04 2004, @12:37AM

    At Capetown, it is clear that the World Summit on the Information Society and its Working Group on Internet Governance continue to loom large in discussions of ICANN's future.

    The new ccNSO is developing a statement to submit to WSIS. A cross-constituency group led by Marilyn Cade is developing a statement defending ICANN. This committee does not include the Noncommercial Users Constituency, which has declined to participate, and its pure defense of ICANN has caused ICANN's At Large Advisory Committee leadership to express concerns.

    At its Capetown meeting, the Noncommercial Users Constituency tried to identify key issues and priorities for the next year. It was agreed that the most important issue to focus on will be ICANN supervision and accountability. This includes the U.S. Department of Commerce's attempt to cut ICANN loose from its supervision MoU in 2006, but also the WSIS/WGIG processes, which may set up alternative arrangements for legitimizing and supervising ICANN.



    NCUC Chair Milton Mueller emphasized that the constituency needs to have clearly defined and well thought-out positions on this problem, which could be advocated both within ICANN and in WSIS and its Working Group on Internet Governance.

    U.S. advocacy group Center for Democracy and Technology's Mike Steffen spoke of a "tough love" approach to ICANN, opposing subjection to teaditional closed, intergovernmental powers, offering support for ICANN's relatively open, multi-stakeholder, non-government dominated processes, while maintaining criticism of its flaws and biases.

    As an action item, the group agreed to make a submission to the WGIG on process and policy regarding ICANN. This process will be used to develop and publicize a position. The submission will probably be developed jointly with the At Large Advisory Committee.

    The joint meeting agreed that with WSIS and WGIG putting pressure on ICANN, now is the time to push for more adequate user representation within ICANN. Even a revival of direct election of Board members was discussed.

    It was also agreed that even without structural changes ALAC and NCUC should make efforts to integrate and strengthen the civil society presence in ICANN and to integrate it more with the civil society activity in the WSIS process.

    One way to do that would be to strongly commit to having a joint ALAC-NCUC meeting at all future ICANN meetings. The meeting agreed to do this.

    Another mechanism would be to create mailing lists focused on broader issues (e.g., privacy, multilingualism) that we could promote among the civil society people involved in WSIS. They could participate in these lists and become more familiar with the issues without having to commit themselves to membership in NCUC or ALAC.

     
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      Related Links  
    · At Large Advisory Committee
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    · More WSIS stories
    · Also by Mueller
     
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    ICANN - WSIS Worlds Continue to Converge | Log in/Create an Account | Top | 17 comments | Search Discussion
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    Re:It’s time for netizens - not ICANN, ISOC or .OR
    by fnord ({groy2k} {at} {yahoo.com}) on Sunday December 05 2004, @11:17PM (#14530)
    User #2810 Info
    Oh crap, hopefully we're close to the conclusion of Jim Fleming nailing his 95 feces to the door. -g
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]
    Re:Marilyn "AT&T" Cade is from AT&T
    by Mueller (muellerNO@SPAMsyr.edu) on Thursday December 09 2004, @06:30PM (#14537)
    User #2901 Info | http://istweb.syr.edu/~mueller/
    A few weeks ago, Marilyn Cade announced her retirement from AT&T effective the end of the year.
    [ Reply to This | Parent ]
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