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[NEWS AND VIEWS] October 31, 2003
The Christian Scientist
is calling on the US to "defend the net from the UN." In an editorial, it argues that countries such as China and Cuba may use WSIS to impose government control on the internet. "Some governments seek to use national security as an excuse to control Internet freedoms," the paper writes. "Already, Cuba has tried to include language that would approve government filtering and censorship of private media. The US delegation must ensure in preconference drafting that the final document defends basic freedoms for Internet users." Meanwhile, a debate is raging within the US about how seriously to take the summit. The State Department's leading telecom official has told industry representatives that decisions have not been made on who will lead the delegation or what position will be taken on key issues. The private sector seems worried: "Some private-sector parties at Wednesday's State Department meeting questioned how U.S. interests will be furthered at the meeting, with one industry representative voicing concern about whether developing countries might unite on telecom-information technology policy principles at odds with the Bush administration, potentially repeating the dynamic that doomed September global trade talks in Cancun, Mexico.".
David Steven | 11:18 AM
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Drowning in data.
800mb of information is produced each year for every person on the planet....
Jane Frewer | 08:52 AM
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October 29, 2003
Information Revolution.
A report issued by RAND, casts some light on the Information Revolution in the Middle East and North Africa, providing a great deal of statistics in its attempt to tackle the issue..
Ahmed Reda | 11:43 PM
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Communication Rights.
WSIS was discussed in several meetings and workshops during the World Social Forum, in Porto Alegre, January 2003. Notes from two of the workshops were gathered by Sasha Costanza-Chock and Pradip Thomas, who are both involved in the campaign CRIS (Communication Rights in the Information Society).
Ahmed Reda | 11:09 PM
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October 28, 2003
Open Source.
The US position on this is summed up as follows: "The United States recognizes that open source software can contribute to increased access and diversity of choice but it is only one of many possible models for the development of software. The WSIS documents should not promote one over the other (i.e. open source vs. proprietary), but should instead foster the availability of diverse alternatives and the freedom to choose among those alternatives."
Update: The guys at Slashdot have got their teeth into this. 147 comments in 5 hours...
David Steven | 11:06 AM
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