[WSIS CS-Plenary] [Re: Fwd: .....] Read the letter from Condoleeza that won the
internet governance battle
David Allen
David_Allen_AB63 at post.harvard.edu
Tue Dec 6 05:12:43 GMT 2005
>Read the letter that won the internet governance battle By Kieren
>McCarthy Published Friday 2nd December 2005 09:07 GMT
>
>http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/12/02/rice_eu_letter/print.html
>
>The World Summit in Tunis last month was overshadowed by the global
>argument over internet governance.
>
>Its biggest controversy came with the proposition put forward by the
>EU a month earlier
>
>...
To have the letter to read is entirely interesting.
But the conclusion that this 'won' the battle for the US is, for me
anyway, akin to suggesting there is a 'war on terror' that will be
'won.' Sorry, for mixing the steam of that politics into the steam
of this ...
I appreciate, as I suspect we most all do, that there are about as
many interpretations of the outcomes for WSIS as there are people
offering opinions. Here is (one of) mine:
In a consensus process, any single entity. large or small, can stop
the show. It seemed clear as far back as two years ago that the US
position would not change. When the outcome is foreordained by the
consensus rule, that is no more a 'win' than, say, the proverbial
'taking candy from a baby' is a win. The big guy may have candy, but
we knew that would be the case before we saw it actually happen. A
win requires something to be up for grabs, in advance. But this is
semantics, if not sophistry; what matters here?
Yes, overt change in the status quo did not appear. But the main
outcome - the event that constituted real motion, and the only real
item in question - was the commitment to a place where there will be
ongoing dialog, the Forum. Kieren McCarthy, the reporter for the
Register who posted the Rice letter story has just today posted a
story that suggests the pressures - seemingly inevitable - to be
exposed going forward:
<http://www.theregister.co.uk/2005/12/05/minc_icann_letter/>Bush
administration control will cause net to split . In my view anyway,
the McCarthy article today reverses the conclusion he drew with the
Rice letter. Rather than a win, there is just the reverse - the
campaign goes on.
Which, again in my view, gives compelling reason for us to
concentrate on the arrangements for that dialog, particularly the
people and the agenda. But then, what matters, if not people and
agenda?!
Footnote: Another of the - key - 'consequences' of WSIS, again in my
view of course, was a gigantic consciousness-raising, around the
world. Tim Kelly and his team's extraordinary
<http://www.itu.int/wsis/stocktaking/index.html>stocktaking, with
approaching 2,500 reported projects, is testament. As far as
governance was concerned, everyone could read the likelihood that the
US position would not change. If that meant there was less heat and
lather as PrepCom 3bis more or less genteelly rolled to its final
midnight hour, that did not prevent the evolution of thinking on any
number of national fronts around the world, across the several years.
There was a - very - wide conscious-raising, on the governance front,
with some dramatically surprising emergence of new positions (leading
among others to the Rice letter).
That evolution will surely continue - may we hope so, to arrive at
what must be a most artful understanding of a most complicated
challenge. We need to get this right, and it will not be easy.
(In case you wonder, I have previously emailed K McCarthy on this score.)
David Allen
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