8/29/2014
The Geneva-based World Economic Forum unveiled a project on Thursday aimed at connecting governments, businesses, academia, technicians and civil society worldwide to brainstorm the best ways to govern the internet.
WEF, which each year gathers the global elite in the plush Swiss ski resort of Davos, launched its NETmundial Initiative in a bid to build on the outcome of a large conference in Brazil in April that called for a transparent, multi-stakeholder approach to running the Web.
The participants at that conference balked at a push by some countries, including China and Russia, for governments to move into a leading role in overseeing the internet, amid fears of the impact this could have on the unity of the Web and on online dissent and freedom of expression.
The WEF project aims to put the goals decided upon in Brazil into action by bringing as many voices as possible into the growing global debate over how to govern the Internet without jeopardizing its diversity.
The platform will basically enable "crowdsourcing with the best experts in the world" to help determine the path forward on a wide range of issues, enthused Pierre Nanterme, a member of the WEF steering board and chief executive of management consultancy giant Accenture.
"We have to find global solutions, global standards for the Internet, because the beast is global," he told AFP.
Through a series of "open and transparent" dialogues with political decision makers, technical experts, business leaders and online privacy and rights advocates and others, WEF aims in coming months to help pinpoint the main issues and problems surrounding internet governance globally and to begin creating a bank of expertise that policy makers can draw from.
The process will culminate in a summit on the issue during the organization's annual Davos meeting next January, WEF chairman Klaus Schwab told reporters.
The goal is not to create an organization to oversee the Web, but to "make sure that the internet does not become fragmented," he said.
The discussions kicked off on Thursday with a meeting at WEF's global headquarters in Geneva of more than 70 top movers and shakers from different sectors.
President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves, the creator of the World Wide Web Tim Berners-Lee, the head of US-linked global internet regulator ICANN, and a wide range of diplomats figured among the participants.
More than 20,000 others followed their discussions online with many weighing in on the debate on Twitter.
source
The Geneva-based World Economic Forum unveiled a project on Thursday aimed at connecting governments, businesses, academia, technicians and civil society worldwide to brainstorm the best ways to govern the internet.
WEF's Klaus Schwab: avoiding "fragmenting" the internet. Photo: AFP/File
WEF, which each year gathers the global elite in the plush Swiss ski resort of Davos, launched its NETmundial Initiative in a bid to build on the outcome of a large conference in Brazil in April that called for a transparent, multi-stakeholder approach to running the Web.
The participants at that conference balked at a push by some countries, including China and Russia, for governments to move into a leading role in overseeing the internet, amid fears of the impact this could have on the unity of the Web and on online dissent and freedom of expression.
The WEF project aims to put the goals decided upon in Brazil into action by bringing as many voices as possible into the growing global debate over how to govern the Internet without jeopardizing its diversity.
The platform will basically enable "crowdsourcing with the best experts in the world" to help determine the path forward on a wide range of issues, enthused Pierre Nanterme, a member of the WEF steering board and chief executive of management consultancy giant Accenture.
"We have to find global solutions, global standards for the Internet, because the beast is global," he told AFP.
Through a series of "open and transparent" dialogues with political decision makers, technical experts, business leaders and online privacy and rights advocates and others, WEF aims in coming months to help pinpoint the main issues and problems surrounding internet governance globally and to begin creating a bank of expertise that policy makers can draw from.
The process will culminate in a summit on the issue during the organization's annual Davos meeting next January, WEF chairman Klaus Schwab told reporters.
The goal is not to create an organization to oversee the Web, but to "make sure that the internet does not become fragmented," he said.
The discussions kicked off on Thursday with a meeting at WEF's global headquarters in Geneva of more than 70 top movers and shakers from different sectors.
President of Estonia Toomas Hendrik Ilves, the creator of the World Wide Web Tim Berners-Lee, the head of US-linked global internet regulator ICANN, and a wide range of diplomats figured among the participants.
More than 20,000 others followed their discussions online with many weighing in on the debate on Twitter.
source
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