Hi everyone,
After all the noise some of us have made at national, regional and
international Internet Governance spaces, it looks like the ITU Council
wants to hear directly “How can small/community/non-profit operators
help in promoting the increase of Internet connectivity?”
This poses an unique opportunity to showcase directly to the ITU Council
all the amazing work that most of you are doing, specially at times
where CNs are gaining more and more visibility to curve the digital
divide and rural marginalization that is now more and more apparent due
to the pandemic. And I say directly because this request is made through
one of the very few consultations the ITU open to all stakeholders: the
Open Public Consultation of the Council Working Group on International
Internet-related Public Policy Issues (CWG-Internet). I provide a bit of
background about it below for those who are interested.
The consultation is structured as a set of questions, one of them the
one included above, available in the following link:
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-sep2020.aspx
where you can also find important information and instructions on the
submission process.
I think it is strategically important that the ITU receives as many
contributions from each of us as possible highlighting the many
different ways community operators help in promoting the increase of
Internet connectivity. This will surely contribute in creating a more
policy and regulatory environment for community networks in each of your
countries.
I’ve copied some of the basic instructions to participate below.
Participating can be as easy as forwarding existing text you may have
written (the GISWatch country report for those of you who wrote it:
https://www.giswatch.org/community-networks) to the email address below.
Note that your online submission can be drafted in a UN language other
than English (these are Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish),
but you are encouraged (not obliged) to provide a translation in English
for the benefit of all readers.
At APC we are available to provide support to any of you wanting to make
a submission but struggling with the process. Please do not hesitate to
reach out to me directly.
Best,
carlos
== Basic instructions ==
You can include your responses to the questions into the online form in
the following link :
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/form-oct2019.aspx OR
send it to InternetPublicViews(a)itu.int including your Full Name, Title,
Country and Organization you are representing.
Your response will then be published on the ITU Website:
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-sep2020.aspx
Please include each submission also includes a short summary/abstract
(1-3 paragraphs). This will form part of the final summary document to
be published after the end of the physical open consultation meeting.
== Background ==
ITU Council Working Groups
There are different Working Groups set up to provide input to the ITU
Council in different matters. In the last last Council Group (February,
2020) meeting four appeared to be active [1]:
- Council Working Group on International Internet-related Public Policy
Issues (CWG-Internet)
- Council working group on Child Online Protection (WG-CP)
- Council Working Group on WSIS (WG-WSIS)
- Council Working Group on Financial and Human Resources (CWG-FHR)
The participation in those working groups varies and some are for
Members States (MS) only, others allow for the participation of Sector
Members (too).
CWG-Internet is limited to Member States, but they hold an open
consultation to all stakeholders. This poses one of the few
opportunities for Civil Society Organizations that are not Sector
Members of the ITU to present their views to the ITU Council. In most
other ITU’s consultations, organizations such as the Association for
Progressive Communications and the Internet Society, both with Sector
Member status do their best to bring the voice of the Civil Society in
general, and of community networks in particular to these spaces.
In particular, CWG-Internet is tasked to identify, study and develop
matters related to international Internet-related public policy issues
and to disseminate its outputs throughout ITU's membership, as well as
to report annually to the Council on activities undertaken on these
subjects [2] [3].
The 13th Session of the ITU Council Working Group on International
Internet-related Public Policy Issues (CWG-Internet) decided on 20
September 2019 to hold an open consultation (online and physical) on
“International internet-related public policy issues on harnessing new
and emerging telecommunications/ICTs for sustainable development” where
some of our contributions provided already content in relation to
community connectivity [4].
In the 13th Session it was also decided that the next round of Open
Consultations (February 2020 – August 2020), on the topic of “Expanding
Internet Connectivity” with the questions below: [5]
Expanding Internet Connectivity
- What are the challenges and opportunities for expanding Internet
connectivity, particularly to remote and under-served areas? What are
the roles of governments and non-government actors in overcoming these
challenges?
- Are there particular challenges facing land-locked countries in
securing affordable Internet access? What can be done to overcome these
challenges?
- How can small/community/non-profit operators help in promoting the
increase of Internet connectivity?
[1] https://www.itu.int/en/council/Pages/groups.aspx
[2] https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/default.aspx
[3] https://www.itu.int/md/S19-CL-C-0136/en
[4]
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-oct2019.aspx
[5]
https://www.itu.int/dms_pub/itu-s/md/19/rclintpol13/c/S19-RCLINTPOL13-C-001…
--
Carlos Rey-Moreno, PhD
Local Access Policy and Regulation Coordinator
Association for Progressive Communications
https://www.apc.org/en/project/connecting-unconnected-supporting-community-…
Cel: +27 (0) 76 986 3633
Skype: carlos.reymoreno Twitter: Creym
I hear G20 are supporting CN. Does anyone know of any specifics regarding this policy please? Regards AmalI De Silva-Mitchell
Sent from my Galaxy Tab A (2016)-------- Original message --------From: Carlos <carlos(a)apc.org> Date: 27/05/2020 22:20 (GMT-08:00) To: dc3 <dc3(a)listas.altermundi.net> Subject: [DC3] ITU Council seeking input on how Community Networks increase
Internet connectivity
Hi everyone,
After all the noise some of us have made at national, regional and
international Internet Governance spaces, it looks like the ITU Council
wants to hear directly “How can small/community/non-profit operators
help in promoting the increase of Internet connectivity?”
This poses an unique opportunity to showcase directly to the ITU Council
all the amazing work that most of you are doing, specially at times
where CNs are gaining more and more visibility to curve the digital
divide and rural marginalization that is now more and more apparent due
to the pandemic. And I say directly because this request is made through
one of the very few consultations the ITU open to all stakeholders: the
Open Public Consultation of the Council Working Group on International
Internet-related Public Policy Issues (CWG-Internet). I provide a bit of
background about it below for those who are interested.
The consultation is structured as a set of questions, one of them the
one included above, available in the following link:
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-sep2020.aspx
where you can also find important information and instructions on the
submission process.
I think it is strategically important that the ITU receives as many
contributions from each of us as possible highlighting the many
different ways community operators help in promoting the increase of
Internet connectivity. This will surely contribute in creating a more
policy and regulatory environment for community networks in each of your
countries.
I’ve copied some of the basic instructions to participate below.
Participating can be as easy as forwarding existing text you may have
written (the GISWatch country report for those of you who wrote it:
https://www.giswatch.org/community-networks) to the email address below.
Note that your online submission can be drafted in a UN language other
than English (these are Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian and Spanish),
but you are encouraged (not obliged) to provide a translation in English
for the benefit of all readers.
At APC we are available to provide support to any of you wanting to make
a submission but struggling with the process. Please do not hesitate to
reach out to me directly.
Best,
carlos
== Basic instructions ==
You can include your responses to the questions into the online form in
the following link :
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/form-oct2019.aspx OR
send it to InternetPublicViews(a)itu.int including your Full Name, Title,
Country and Organization you are representing.
Your response will then be published on the ITU Website:
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-sep2020.aspx
Please include each submission also includes a short summary/abstract
(1-3 paragraphs). This will form part of the final summary document to
be published after the end of the physical open consultation meeting.
== Background ==
ITU Council Working Groups
There are different Working Groups set up to provide input to the ITU
Council in different matters. In the last last Council Group (February,
2020) meeting four appeared to be active [1]:
- Council Working Group on International Internet-related Public Policy
Issues (CWG-Internet)
- Council working group on Child Online Protection (WG-CP)
- Council Working Group on WSIS (WG-WSIS)
- Council Working Group on Financial and Human Resources (CWG-FHR)
The participation in those working groups varies and some are for
Members States (MS) only, others allow for the participation of Sector
Members (too).
CWG-Internet is limited to Member States, but they hold an open
consultation to all stakeholders. This poses one of the few
opportunities for Civil Society Organizations that are not Sector
Members of the ITU to present their views to the ITU Council. In most
other ITU’s consultations, organizations such as the Association for
Progressive Communications and the Internet Society, both with Sector
Member status do their best to bring the voice of the Civil Society in
general, and of community networks in particular to these spaces.
In particular, CWG-Internet is tasked to identify, study and develop
matters related to international Internet-related public policy issues
and to disseminate its outputs throughout ITU's membership, as well as
to report annually to the Council on activities undertaken on these
subjects [2] [3].
The 13th Session of the ITU Council Working Group on International
Internet-related Public Policy Issues (CWG-Internet) decided on 20
September 2019 to hold an open consultation (online and physical) on
“International internet-related public policy issues on harnessing new
and emerging telecommunications/ICTs for sustainable development” where
some of our contributions provided already content in relation to
community connectivity [4].
In the 13th Session it was also decided that the next round of Open
Consultations (February 2020 – August 2020), on the topic of “Expanding
Internet Connectivity” with the questions below: [5]
Expanding Internet Connectivity
- What are the challenges and opportunities for expanding Internet
connectivity, particularly to remote and under-served areas? What are
the roles of governments and non-government actors in overcoming these
challenges?
- Are there particular challenges facing land-locked countries in
securing affordable Internet access? What can be done to overcome these
challenges?
- How can small/community/non-profit operators help in promoting the
increase of Internet connectivity?
[1] https://www.itu.int/en/council/Pages/groups.aspx
[2] https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/default.aspx
[3] https://www.itu.int/md/S19-CL-C-0136/en
[4]
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-oct2019.aspx
[5]
https://www.itu.int/dms_pub/itu-s/md/19/rclintpol13/c/S19-RCLINTPOL13-C-001…
--
Carlos Rey-Moreno, PhD
Local Access Policy and Regulation Coordinator
Association for Progressive Communications
https://www.apc.org/en/project/connecting-unconnected-supporting-community-…
Cel: +27 (0) 76 986 3633
Skype: carlos.reymoreno Twitter: Creym
_______________________________________________
DC3 mailing list
DC3(a)listas.altermundi.net
https://listas.altermundi.net/mailman/listinfo/dc3
I posted a contribution as requested Regards Amali De Silva-Mitchell Former President Vancouver Community Network nonprofit ISP ++ I said access is now moving to be a human right ....
Sent from my Galaxy Tab A (2016)-------- Original message --------From: Carlos <carlos(a)apc.org> Date: 29/05/2020 01:07 (GMT-08:00) To: dc3(a)listas.altermundi.net Subject: Re: [DC3] ITU Council seeking input on how Community Networks increase Internet connectivity
Hi AmalI,
The G20 mentioned CNs indeed in its "COVID-19 Response Statement
from the G20 Virtual Ministerial Meeting" as one of the means to
expand connectivity “Furthermore, digital capacities should be
expanded, in particular by increasing broadband connectivity using
fixed, mobile, and satellite technologies and by exploring
non-traditional means of connectivity, such as community
networks.”
https://g20.org/en/media/Documents/G20%20DETF%20COVID-19%20Ministerial%20St…
Policy makers are going sufficiently slow about CNs in most
countries. If at all, I see the interest of the ITU contributing
to speed up things. It's obviously voluntary for everyone to
participate in this process, but the process is taking place
regardless, and either we contribute or the likes of the GSMA,
Viasat and Telefonica will contribute with their own definitions
of community networks which are very far from the ones that have
been considered here. In that case, is not only that the ITU may
influence policy makers, is that is will influence them with the
wrong evidence.
Here an example of the interpretation of what community
involvement means for GSMA and one of its members
https://www.gsma.com/mobilefordevelopment/wp-content/uploads/2019/07/GSMA-C…https://techcentral.co.za/vodacom-to-pay-community-members-to-protect-its-b…
best,
carlos
On 28/5/20 21:07, Raoul Plommer wrote:
We need to work with ITU, if we want changes like
free spectrum to break through internationally. However, I
totally agree that we need to be very careful what power we give
them in advising them.
-Raoul
On Thu, 28 May 2020 at 16:46,
sivasubramanian muthusamy <6.internet(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
It is good to keep the ITU informed, but this
can't lead to a situation where ITU gains total legitimacy
over all policy related to community networks, which might
place the ITU in a position to influence all decisions, some
of which might cause the policy makers to go slow on
Community Networks... (Sorry, I find it difficult to trust
the influences weighing in on ITU)
On Thu, May 28, 2020,
19:10 gphlilanthi <gphlilanthi(a)gmail.com>
wrote:
I hear G20 are supporting CN. Does anyone know of
any specifics regarding this policy please?
Regards AmalI De Silva-Mitchell
Sent from my Galaxy Tab A (2016)
-------- Original message --------
From: Carlos <carlos(a)apc.org>
Date: 27/05/2020 22:20 (GMT-08:00)
To: dc3 <dc3(a)listas.altermundi.net>
Subject: [DC3] ITU Council seeking input on how
Community Networks increase Internet connectivity
Hi everyone,
After all the noise some of us have made at national,
regional and
international Internet Governance spaces, it looks like
the ITU Council
wants to hear directly “How can
small/community/non-profit operators
help in promoting the increase of Internet
connectivity?”
This poses an unique opportunity to showcase directly to
the ITU Council
all the amazing work that most of you are doing,
specially at times
where CNs are gaining more and more visibility to curve
the digital
divide and rural marginalization that is now more and
more apparent due
to the pandemic. And I say directly because this request
is made through
one of the very few consultations the ITU open to all
stakeholders: the
Open Public Consultation of the Council Working Group on
International
Internet-related Public Policy Issues (CWG-Internet). I
provide a bit of
background about it below for those who are interested.
The consultation is structured as a set of questions,
one of them the
one included above, available in the following link:
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-sep2020.aspx
where you can also find important information and
instructions on the
submission process.
I think it is strategically important that the ITU
receives as many
contributions from each of us as possible highlighting
the many
different ways community operators help in promoting the
increase of
Internet connectivity. This will surely contribute in
creating a more
policy and regulatory environment for community networks
in each of your
countries.
I’ve copied some of the basic instructions to
participate below.
Participating can be as easy as forwarding existing text
you may have
written (the GISWatch country report for those of you
who wrote it:
https://www.giswatch.org/community-networks)
to the email address below.
Note that your online submission can be drafted in a UN
language other
than English (these are Arabic, Chinese, French, Russian
and Spanish),
but you are encouraged (not obliged) to provide a
translation in English
for the benefit of all readers.
At APC we are available to provide support to any of you
wanting to make
a submission but struggling with the process. Please do
not hesitate to
reach out to me directly.
Best,
carlos
== Basic instructions ==
You can include your responses to the questions into the
online form in
the following link :
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/form-oct2019.aspx
OR
send it to InternetPublicViews(a)itu.int
including your Full Name, Title,
Country and Organization you are representing.
Your response will then be published on the ITU Website:
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-sep2020.aspx
Please include each submission also includes a short
summary/abstract
(1-3 paragraphs). This will form part of the final
summary document to
be published after the end of the physical open
consultation meeting.
== Background ==
ITU Council Working Groups
There are different Working Groups set up to provide
input to the ITU
Council in different matters. In the last last Council
Group (February,
2020) meeting four appeared to be active [1]:
- Council Working Group on International
Internet-related Public Policy
Issues (CWG-Internet)
- Council working group on Child Online Protection
(WG-CP)
- Council Working Group on WSIS (WG-WSIS)
- Council Working Group on Financial and Human Resources
(CWG-FHR)
The participation in those working groups varies and
some are for
Members States (MS) only, others allow for the
participation of Sector
Members (too).
CWG-Internet is limited to Member States, but they hold
an open
consultation to all stakeholders. This poses one of the
few
opportunities for Civil Society Organizations that are
not Sector
Members of the ITU to present their views to the ITU
Council. In most
other ITU’s consultations, organizations such as the
Association for
Progressive Communications and the Internet Society,
both with Sector
Member status do their best to bring the voice of the
Civil Society in
general, and of community networks in particular to
these spaces.
In particular, CWG-Internet is tasked to identify, study
and develop
matters related to international Internet-related public
policy issues
and to disseminate its outputs throughout ITU's
membership, as well as
to report annually to the Council on activities
undertaken on these
subjects [2] [3].
The 13th Session of the ITU Council Working Group on
International
Internet-related Public Policy Issues (CWG-Internet)
decided on 20
September 2019 to hold an open consultation (online and
physical) on
“International internet-related public policy issues on
harnessing new
and emerging telecommunications/ICTs for sustainable
development” where
some of our contributions provided already content in
relation to
community connectivity [4].
In the 13th Session it was also decided that the next
round of Open
Consultations (February 2020 – August 2020), on the
topic of “Expanding
Internet Connectivity” with the questions below: [5]
Expanding Internet Connectivity
- What are the challenges and opportunities for
expanding Internet
connectivity, particularly to remote and under-served
areas? What are
the roles of governments and non-government actors in
overcoming these
challenges?
- Are there particular challenges facing land-locked
countries in
securing affordable Internet access? What can be done to
overcome these
challenges?
- How can small/community/non-profit operators help in
promoting the
increase of Internet connectivity?
[1] https://www.itu.int/en/council/Pages/groups.aspx
[2] https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/default.aspx
[3] https://www.itu.int/md/S19-CL-C-0136/en
[4]
https://www.itu.int/en/council/cwg-internet/Pages/consultation-oct2019.aspx
[5]
https://www.itu.int/dms_pub/itu-s/md/19/rclintpol13/c/S19-RCLINTPOL13-C-001…
--
Carlos Rey-Moreno, PhD
Local Access Policy and Regulation Coordinator
Association for Progressive Communications
https://www.apc.org/en/project/connecting-unconnected-supporting-community-…
Cel: +27 (0) 76 986 3633
Skype: carlos.reymoreno Twitter: Creym
_______________________________________________
DC3 mailing list
DC3(a)listas.altermundi.net
https://listas.altermundi.net/mailman/listinfo/dc3
_______________________________________________
DC3 mailing list
DC3(a)listas.altermundi.net
https://listas.altermundi.net/mailman/listinfo/dc3
_______________________________________________
DC3 mailing list
DC3(a)listas.altermundi.net
https://listas.altermundi.net/mailman/listinfo/dc3
_______________________________________________
DC3 mailing list
DC3(a)listas.altermundi.net
https://listas.altermundi.net/mailman/listinfo/dc3
--
Carlos Rey-Moreno, PhD
Local Access Policy and Regulation Coordinator
Association for Progressive Communications
https://www.apc.org/en/project/connecting-unconnected-supporting-community-…
Cel: +27 (0) 76 986 3633
Skype: carlos.reymoreno Twitter: Creym
Hi all,
As the DC3 website was unavailable since several months, I asked a colleague at FGV to help put together a new DC3 website, including very basic info about the coalition and our IGF outcomes.
Here is the result https://comconnectivity.org/
I hope you enjoy it
All the best
Luca
A certain participant of an Internet Society India Chennai Chapter special
mailing list seeking pointers:
to learn more about 5G's potential implications for democracy and human
rights. (Very broad... I know). I wonder if anyone on this list has any
resources to share on architecture or deployment, for instance:
- a good high level overview of technical/architectural elements,
- further information about potential resource conflicts in relation to
4g/6g/fiber, etc.,
- risks around proprietary software, etc.
Links, key words, directions towards initiatives or organizations to look
at — anything would be a huge help!
Bringing that question to this list to seek help in answering that question.
Thank you
Sivasubramanian M <https://www.linkedin.com/in/sivasubramanianmuthusamy/>
Dear all
I hope you and your families are doing well in these troubled times
This email is to let you know we are launching today the online symposium on The Value of Internet Openness at Times of Covid19 (short title: Internet Openness & Covid19)
Here is the introductory essay: https://www.medianama.com/2020/05/223-covid19-makes-internet-access-and-ope…
Tomorrow we will have the pleasure of having Vint Cerf opening essay and then we will have two weeks of truly fantastic contributions.
I am building a twitter thread to include all the links to the essays over the next two weeks. In case you are interested, see the start here https://twitter.com/1lucabelli/status/1260545898850988032
Updated versions of all the essays will be included in a booklet on "The Value of Internet Openness at Times of Crises" to be released at the IGF as a joint outcome of the DCs on Net Neutrality and on Community Connectivity, in partnership with DEF India and CyberBRICS.
All the best
Luca