17-18 May 2013 Geneva Global Governance of the Internet

Advanced Cyber/IO, Autonomous Internet

giganet plainGlobal Governance of the Internet: Intergovernmentalism, multistakeholderism, and networks

International Workshop

17-18 May 2013, Geneva, Switzerland

PDF:  2013-03-16 GigaNet 17-18 May Geneva

We invite five-page long memos that address the role and future of different models of governance of the Internet, presenting recently completed research or work in progress. Papers from any discipline or institution, from emerging as well as established scholars, are encouraged. Key questions to be addressed include, but are not limited to, the following:
· What are the long-term implications of the failure of the WCIT? Is talk of an Internet “Cold War” relevant, or misleading?
· How can we assess the role of intergovernmental organizations in Internet governance?
· How can cooperation between intergovernmental organizations and NGOs be structured?
· What are the potential and limitations of multistakeholder models of governance?
· What role do non-hierarchical networks currently play in global Internet governance, and should that role be increased or diminished?
· What is the relevance of sovereignty and jurisdiction when the Internet creates cross-border harm?

Yoda: Google Glass — Dark Side of the Force? + Big Data RECAP

Civil Society, Commerce, IO Impotency
Got Crowd? BE the Force!
Got Crowd? BE the Force!

Concerns, have we.

Google Glass: The opposition grows

“Stop The Cyborgs” is a new site that attempts to bring a balanced trepidation to the unbalanced idea that we'll all be walking round with Google's outer brain strapped to our faces.

The opposition will congregate in dark corners.

They will whisper with their mouths, while their eyes will scan the room for spies wearing strange spectacles.

The spies will likely be men. How many women would really like to waft down the street wearing Google Glass?

It won't be easy. Once you've been cybernated, there's no turning back. Which is why the refuseniks are already meeting in shaded corners of the Web.

One site is called “Stop The Cyborgs.” It claims to be “fighting the algorithmic future one bit at a time.”

Google_Glass_stickerIt's going to take a lot of bitty fighting, but the people behind this site — they're naturally anonymous, in an attempt to stop Google spying on them — say they're fighting Google Glass in particular.

They say that it will herald a world in which “privacy is impossible and corporate control total.”

Some would say that, thanks to Googlies and other bright, deluded sparks, we're there already. The Lord and Master Zuckerberg explained to us a long time ago that he knows us better than we do and that we don't actually want privacy at all.

Still, the people behind this anti-cyborg movement claim that there's no way you'll ever know that someone wearing Google Glass is recording your every word and movement.

There's no way of even knowing if someone else is recording you through their glasses from somewhere in the cloud.

And how are we, whose egos are already more fragile than a porcelain potty, supposed to feel when we know that a glasses-wearer has one eye on us and another on our Klout score or teenage sexting pictures?

The site explains: “Gradually people will stop acting as autonomous individuals, when making decisions and interacting with others, and instead become mere sensor/effector nodes of a global network.”

Continue reading “Yoda: Google Glass — Dark Side of the Force? + Big Data RECAP”

John Maguire: Mesh Networks and Pirate Internet

Autonomous Internet

maguire“From SOPA and PIPA to ACTA to CISPA to the TPP and now back to CISPA, internet activists have been caught up in a deliberately bewildering game of whack-a-mole with freedom-crushing legislation. Now, ISPs are doing an end run around the whole legislative process altogether and voluntarily collaborating with the entertainment industry to spy on their own customers. All of this is enough to leave concerned netizens demoralized, and in the war of attrition that is exactly the goal. Join us today on The Corbett Report as we explore a real, grassroots, alternative solution to the problem of internet censorhip that can help to end this government/corporate control over our communication once and for all.”

For our interests, if you care to watch this, you could probably just skip to 21.30 ~; as the first half the video is just concerned with discussing SOPA, etc, and general activism that you're likely already aware of. From 22min till the end is where they really dig into pirate internet solutions and mesh networks that are the meat of the issue.

http://www.corbettreport.com/episode-262-solutions-pirate-internet/

22-28Min: James Corbett and radio-host Jack Blood discuss the possibility for setting up pirate-internet networks as a response to the incessant efforts of internet-fascists and their legislative puppets to pass proposals such as CISPA. Blood mentions his experience/success with localized, pirate broadcasting that circumvents centralized/censored networks.

28-38Min: Clip from a CNet-Trialogue that discusses what are known as Mesh Networks. Mesh Networks, originally conceived of by the Military-Industrial Complex, are a tool citizens can now leverage to liberate themselves and set up decentralized, uncensored internet accessibility. Requiring only a small investment into already-existing radio equipment, people can set up these networks by first adapting their Smart-Phones. Because of their processing power Smart Phones can serve as Mesh Network nodes that allow for the creation of a node-to-node Wi-Fi Network. This allows for the complete bypassing of any potential government lockdown.

38-43Min: Corbett highlights the work of Tony Cartalucci @ http://localorg.blogspot.com/. Cartalucci's article Decentralizing Telecom explains the practical side of implementing these new types of web-networks at a local level.

See Also:

P2P / Autonomous Internet Roadmap

PBI / Autonomous Internet (147)

Berto Jongman: Legendary Russian Documentary on Nazi Interest in Antartica, Now with English Sub-Titles

08 Wild Cards, Cultural Intelligence, Earth Intelligence, Extraterrestial Intelligence, Government, History, IO Secrets, IO Technologies, Military, YouTube
Berto Jongman
Berto Jongman

Includes 1947 US naval expedition led by Robert Byrd broken off after being attacked by objects that vertically take off from the sea. Russian scientists hypothesize US military HAARP bases on Antartica and Alaska are intended for identifying the characteristics of wormholes used by alien visitors to access and leave earth.

Published on Sep 25, 2012

Phi Beta Iota:  RIVETING.  Superb subtitles easy to follow.  Brilliant photography.

Below the Line: Lengthy overview of film.

Continue reading “Berto Jongman: Legendary Russian Documentary on Nazi Interest in Antartica, Now with English Sub-Titles”

Michel Bauwens: Abandoning Checks & Balances

Civil Society, Cultural Intelligence, Ethics, IO Impotency
Michel Bauwens
Michel Bauwens

Question authority!

‘We are abandoning all the checks and balances’

WASHINGTON – Evgeny Morozov is a Belarus-born technology writer who has held positions at Stanford and Georgetown universities in the United States. His first book, The Net Delusion: The Dark Side of Internet Freedom, argued that “Western do-gooders may have missed how [the Internet] … entrenches dictators, threatens dissidents, and makes it harder — not easier — to promote democracy.” The New York Times described it as “brilliant and courageous.”

In his second book, To Save Everything, Click Here: The Follow of Technological Solutionism, Click Here, Morozov critiques what he calls “solutionism” — the idea that given the right code, algorithms and robots, technology can solve all of mankind’s problems, effectively making life “frictionless” and problem-free.

Evgeny Morozov
Evgeny Morozov

Morozov argues that this drive to eradicate imperfection and make everything “efficient” shuts down other avenues of progress and leads ultimately to an algorithm-driven world where Silicon Valley, rather than elected governments, determines the shape of the future.

. . . . . . . . . .

All solutions come with cost. Shifting a lot of the responsibility to the individual is a very conservative approach that seeks to preserve the current system instead of reforming it. With self-tracking we end up optimizing our behavior within the existing constraints rather than changing the constraints to begin with. It places us as consumers rather than citizens. My fear is policymakers will increasingly find that it is much easier, cheaper and sexier to invite the likes of Google to engage in some of this problem-solving rather than do something that is much more ambitious and radical.

. . . . . . . . . .

I have a lot of respect for these people as engineers, but they are being asked to take on tasks that go far beyond engineering — tasks that have to do with human and social engineering rather than technical engineering. Those are the kind of tasks I would prefer were taken on by human beings who are more well rounded, who know about philosophy and ethics, and know something about things other than efficiency, because it will not end well.

. . . . . . . . . .

The newspaper offers something very different from Google’s aggregators. It offers a value system, an idea of what matters in the world. Newspapers need to start articulating that value.

. . . . . . . . . .

There are many problems I have with TED. It has created this infrastructure where it very easy to be interesting without being very deep. If TED exercised their curatorial powers responsibly, they would be able to separate the good interesting from the bad interesting. But my fear is they don’t care as long as it drives eyeballs to the website. They don’t align themselves with the thinkers, they align themselves with marketing, advertising, futurists who are interested in ideas for the sake of ideas. They don’t care how these ideas relate to each other and they don’t much care for what those ideas actually mean. TED has come to exercise lots of power but they don’t exercise it wisely.

Read full article.

Call for Papers: Future of Multilateralism in Governance and Regulation of Communications

Advanced Cyber/IO

Opportunity to showcase your research on the Future of Multilateralism in the Governance and Regulation of Communications

Special issue call for papers from Info

Special call for papers on Multilaterism in the governance and regulation of communications

More about the special issue

The editor of info invites you to submit a paper to a forthcoming special issue on the topic of the future of multilateralism in the governance and regulation of communications. This special issue proposes a scholarly exploration of the topic.

Schedule and deadlines

Submission deadline: 16 June 2013
Tentative publication date: February 2014

More about the speical issue

The failure at the WCIT meeting in Dubai to reach consensus over updating the International Telecommunication regulations reveals more starkly than ever the growing fault lines in the international governance and regulation of communications. This special issue proposes a scholarly exploration of the topic.

  • Papers are therefore invited on the specific issues raised by WCIT but also on the wider theme of multilateral governance and regulation
  • This could include, for instance, articles on subjects such as the impact of trade negotiations and agreements (regional as well as global/WTO); the impact of the EU jurisdiction (not only within the EU itself, but also in the EEA countries and in countries at various stages of the accession)
  • Or it could encompass a variety of aspects with regard to the ITU (eg the continuing impact of ITU processes and institutions on management of the radio spectrum and satellite orbital characteristics).

Contact the editor Dr Colin Blackman for more information to discuss your proposed paper and abstract.

Click here to see the journal's submission guidelines and notes for authors

Eagle: Westphalian Pathologies Replicated in the Internet?

Advanced Cyber/IO, Autonomous Internet
300 Million Talons...
300 Million Talons…

Good thinking.  Foreign Policy is getting better.

The New Westphalian Web

The future of the Internet may lie in the past. And that's not a good thing.

Nearly 365 years ago, more than 100 warring diplomats and princes got together in the cities of Münster and Osnabrück, in what is now northwestern Germany. There they signed a set of treaties that became the basic framework for our modern world: the Peace of Westphalia. Thanks to these dignitaries, we have territorial sovereignty: nation-states, demarcated by borders.

In the intervening centuries, Westphalian sovereignty has been the basic ordering principle of our societies. Empires have risen and fallen, countries come and gone. The most successful states have established internal monopolies on information and resources and have exerted discretion on what trade, ideas, money, or people crossed their borders.

But 30 years ago, humanity gave birth to one of the most disruptive forces of our time. On Jan. 1, 1983, the implementation of TCP/IP — a standard protocol to allow computers to exchange data over a network — turned discrete clusters of research computers into a distributed global phenomenon. It was essentially the work of three men: two engineers to write the protocol, and one to carry out the plan. It was a birth so quiet no one even has a photo of the day; arecent post by one of TCP/IP's authors, Vint Cerf, was able to turn up only a commemorative pin.

Continue reading “Eagle: Westphalian Pathologies Replicated in the Internet?”