introduction keith davidson: isoc - board of trustees icann – vice chair, ccnso icann - chair –...
TRANSCRIPT
Introduction
Keith Davidson:
• ISOC - Board of Trustees • ICANN – Vice Chair, ccNSO • ICANN - Chair – Working Group on ccTLD
Delegations and Redelegations• InternetNZ - International Director • Pacific IGF – Convenor / Enthusiast• Asia Pacific IGF – Organising Committee• PIP – Secretary
My Topics at PacINET 13
• This Session, 3 themes:
1. The Internet Society (ISOC)
2. Pacific Internet Partnership (PIP)
3. Vision of the Pacific Islands Internet future
• Wednesday – Domain Names
• The .nz model
• Delegation and Redelegation of ccTLDs
• Thursday- Internet Governance
• Internet Governance Principles
The Internet Society (ISOC)
Society formed in 1993
Vision: ”The Internet is for everyone”
Main offices in Reston, USA and Geneva, Switzerland, + regional bureaus.
90+ chapters worldwide, 20+ in AP region
65,000+ individual members
145+ Organisation Members
100+ staff, US$50 million revenue
ISOC
Vision: “The Internet is for everyone”
Mission: “To promote the open development, evolution, and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people throughout the world”
ISOC
ISOC Board of Directors:— Elections of directors are for a 3 year term
— Moving to Board of 12 in total, 4 directors from each:ChaptersOrganisational Members Technical Community / IETF / IAB
— 2 directors from AP regionKeith Davidson, from Organisation MembersNarelle Clark, President of ISOC Australia, Chapters
ISOC – Main Activities
• Champions public policies on open access
• Facilitates open development of standards, protocols and the technical infrastructure
• Organises opportunities that bring people together to share insights and opinions
• Provides education opportunities including training workshops
• Facilitates leadership programmes e.g. Next Generation Leaders and Internet Governance Forum (IGF) Ambassadors
ISOC – Main Activities
• Encourages innovation by providing grants and awards to relevant initiatives and outreach efforts that address the humanitarian, educational, and societal contexts of online connectivity
• Acknowledges individuals who have made outstanding contributions to the Internet e.g. the Jonathan B. Postel Award and the Internet Hall of Fame
Pacific Internet Partnership (PIP)
2004 partnership between InternetNZ, UNESCO and UNDP Samoa
Main purpose to fund travel fellowships to assist enriching technical knowledge in the Pacific
Changed to PIPI (UNESCO, UNDP no longer involved)
Used as the “umbrella” for organising the inaugural Pacific IGF in New Caledonia
PIP has raised over US$400,000 for this purpose
PIP has funded over 150 Pacific Islanders in the past 10 years (around75% to PICISOC)
Co-chairs: Ellen Strickland and Don Hollander
www.apnic.netAsia Pacific Network Information Centre
www.ausregistry.com Registry Solutions Provider in gTLDs,
ccTLDs and IDN TLDs
www.registry.asia www.community.asia
www.auda.org.auAustralian Domain
Name Administrator
www.icann.org The Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and
Numbers
www.internetnz.net.nz www.iusn.nu
Internet Users Society of Niue
www.isoc.orgThe Internet Society
www.pch.net Packet Clearing House
www.verisign.comwww.verisign.tvwww.verisign.cc
??Help us
find moresponsors
www.nic.as GDNS – ccTLD
Manager for .asSponsors and Supporters
email: [email protected]
Pacific Islands – Internet Penetration
Country Name 2000 2005 2010 2012 Rank
New Caledonia 13.9% 32.4% 42.0% 58.0% 1French Polynesia 6.4% 21.5% 49.0% 52.9% 2Philippines 2.0% 5.4% 25.0% 36.2% 3Tuvalu 5.2% 25.0% 35.0% 4Tonga 2.4% 4.9% 16.0% 34.9% 5Fiji 1.5% 8.5% 20.0% 33.7% 6
FS Micronesia 3.7% 11.9% 20.0% 26.0% 7
P I small states 1.5% 5.6% 13.1% 21.0%World 6.7% 15.8% 29.4% 32.7%
Pacific Islands – Internet Penetration
Country Name 2000 2005 2010 2012 Rank
Samoa 0.6% 3.4% 7.0% 12.9% 8Kiribati 1.8% 4.0% 9.1% 10.7% 9Vanuatu 2.1% 5.1% 8.0% 10.6% 10Marshall Islands 1.5% 3.9% 4.0% 10.0% 11Solomon Islands 0.5% 0.8% 5.0% 7.0% 12Papua New Guinea 0.8% 1.7% 1.3% 2.3% 13Timor-Leste 0.1% 0.2% 0.9% 14
P I small states 1.5% 5.6% 13.1% 21.0%World 6.7% 15.8% 29.4% 32.7%
Pacific Islands – Internet Penetration
Country Name 2000 2005 2010 2012 Rank
P I small states 1.5% 5.6% 13.1% 21.0%World 6.7% 15.8% 29.4% 32.7%
Australia 46.8% 63.0% 76.0% 82.3%New Zealand 47.4% 62.7% 83.0% 89.5%
Pacific Islands – Future
Tonga (and other PI’s) connecting to international fibre optic networks
Will lead to significant improvements in uptake and use of the Internet through faster speeds / cheaper prices
Will bring new and additional bad behaviours in country and from offshore
Education, technical upskilling, possible legal reforms and new ways of thinking about the Internet required
Pacific Islands Internet of the Future
Root Server Mirrors deployed in every country
Peering wherever there are multiple providers
Peering amongst PI countries
Major providers (Microsoft / Apple / Google etc) caching content locally
ISPs providing free access to software security updates
Telco / Internet Regulators creating level playing fields, especially for new ISPs / new services
ccTLD policies set by local Internet community
Pacific Islands Internet of the Future
Public policies developed through multistakeholder dialogue
In-country Internet Governance Forums, building policy ideas for the local Internet community, building to trans-Pacific Internet Governance Forum and joint policy development processes where appropriate
Multistakeholderism is the norm for setting ICT and Internet policies
All stakeholders can participate in all PI forums on an equal basis
Thank You / Questions ?
Keith Davidson ([email protected])