Headlines 3 October 2001
ISOC England members volunteer assistance for the US Internet infrastructure following attacks.
Offers are flooding in to help our Internet colleagues in the USA on the “offers of help” exchange web-site, put together mainly for the NANOG (North American Network Operators Group) list who were being sent a large number of help offers to their mailing list.
The site built by Rob Pickering of Redbourne is using the same XML technology as the new ISOC England website.
People with specific networking skills who are available to help with network re-building or general Internet infrastructure, should pleasesign up here.
Vint Cerf writes “Information is the torch of truth and its free flow is the bloodstream of democracy”
Dr. Cerf co-inventor of the Internet Protocol and Chairman of the Internet regulatory organisation ICANN wrote to Internauts everywhere whilst stranded in Chicago following the attack on the USA on 11th September.
Internet Master Engineering Lectures looked at fault line issues of the Internet
The August meetings of the IETF in London saw a series of Master engineering lectures that looked at a number of the major challenges which face the evolution of the Internet. The lectures are available here.
Internet has middle age spread
During the IETF plenary session in London in August, Steve Deering of the IAB proposed slimming down the IP layer to an “hourglass figure” as the correct architecture for the Internet’s Internet Protcol layer.
Events(register now)Europaeum “Democracy & the Internet ” Sheldonian Theatre, Oxford University
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FeaturesInternet Societal Task ForceTechnology and social issues are linked by ISOC through a new organisation, The Internet Societal Task Force (ISTF). ICANNNews from Montevideo meetings |
Headlines June 2002
ICANN Reform Consultation opens in the UKThe DTI have written to the Internet Society asking for submissions from the Internet community in the UK on the ICANN reform process underway. The submissions need to be made in writing by 14th June. Information on ICANN consultation in the UK
ISOC England partner Internet World and Next Tech conference. The new event for the next generation of IT covering storage, webservices, outsourcing and networking. It’s a dedicated event with a
INET 2002 The Internet Society’s major global Internet conference 18-21 June, 2002 – Washington,DC. The world’s premier Internet conference.
ISOC Election candidates for the chapter seat nominated. The ISOC Nominations Committee has announced the three candidates for the chapters seat on the ISOC board of trustees for 2002 elections. Candidates bios and statements have been published. The implementation details for the new governance model agreed at its last board meeting during the IETF meeting in Salt Lake City December 2001. Letter from ISOC President Lynn St. Amour and Chairman Brian Carpenter to chapter Presidents.
ISOC England launches Newsletter. The first issue of ISOC England’s Newsletter has been issued in January 2002. Featuring News, Introduction of the Board and two feature articles; The mutual beliefs at the centre of the Internet evolution by Christian de Larrinaga and Internet and Opting out, or in… or was it out ? by Rianne C. ten Veen and an ISOC England Member’s 60 seconds survey
ICANN DNS Security Report In the wake of the September 11 terrorist attacks, ICANN is making a sustained effort to devote energy and resources to security matters relating to the Internet’s naming and address allocation systems. Thisdocument provides background on that effort, summarizes the assessments made at ICANN’s recent meeting on DNS security, and details the next steps to be taken by ICANN and a range of its constituent organizations.
The “Internet Report” is launched The Internet Report carries daily and weekly summaries of the current developments within the Internet Engineering Task Force’s Internet Standards activities from the very home of the standards activities. The report covers drafts of proposed Internet standards, protocols, and other related issues under consideration by the IETF.
Top 20 Internet Security threats and what to do. The Sans Institute’s latest list offers detailed prioritised information on the top security threats which Internet users need to be aware of and take active steps to protect themselves from.
Webarchive 8 Dec 2002
Headlines
ISOC England’s Breakfast Briefings @ Burson-Marsteller The global debate about the future of ICANN, initiated by the ICANN President in February this year, comes to a head at the Annual Meeting being held in Europe for the first time, in Amsterdam, on 14th and 15th December 2002. ISOC E’s first breakfast briefing brought together members, senior knowledge leaders and members of the UK business community to discuss reform of the ICANN piece of global Internet governance. The speakers were Adrian Pinder, Assistant Director for Global e-commerce policy in the Department of Trade & Industry, and UK Government representative on the ICANN Governmental Advisory Committee; and Catherine Gabay, Director of Innovation & Research at MEDEF (Mouvement des Entreprises de France), the French equivalent of the CBI. A digest of the briefing is available here
The ICANN Domain Name Support Organisation Names Council Report and Recommendations on WHOIS Accuracy and Bulk Access, reporting on 30 November 2002 concluded… WHOIS is an important resource to users, ISPs, governmental users, intellectual property holders and the intellectual property community, and to registrars. Yet, and not surprisingly, some questions related to WHOIS are controversial. Several questions still deserve addressing. These include privacy issues; the cost of maintaining accurate data; who should have unlimited access; what uses are “legitimate”, and many more. The Report’s authors seek comments by 8 December 2002
ICANN has also posted an action plan for adding three new gTLDS to the world root server system. Public comments are invited, submit them before Dec. 10, 2002 to gtld-plan-comments@icann.org Groups that submitted applications in 2000 will be permitted to update their applications, and ICANN will allow others to submit bids. According to Stuart Lynn, the dilemma is choosing between “market forces” and attempts to adopt a “taxonomic” approach to rationalize the DNS. Will 2003 see the completion of a successful application by the promoters of a .travel gTLD and by mobile telephony operators for .mobi?
All Party Internet Group to hold public inquiry into the retention of and access to communications data for law enforcement purposes The All Party Internet Group (APIG) is to hold a public inquiry into all aspects of communications data retention and the subsequent access to that data from a UK, European and global perspective. The inquiry will primarily focus on the enforcement of the powers contained in the Regulation of Investigatory Powers Act and the Anti-Terrorism, Crime & Security Act and their subsequent effect on communication service providers. ISOC England will give written evidence by the 5 December 2002 deadline.
The Foundation for Information Policy Research (FIPR) welcomes the recent statement from Europe’s Data Protection Commissioners rejecting the current proposals for mandatory data retention by phone companies and ISPs. The UK and other EU governments have put forward proposals to force ISPs and phone companies to stockpile many years of customer records, on the off-chance they will be useful for police surveillance. This data would include catalogues of web sites visited, records of e-mail recipients, lists of telephone numbers dialled, and the geographical location of mobile phones at all times they were switched on. http://www.fipr.org/press/020916Commissioners.html
Towards an Information Society for All It is at once poignant and ironic that we are drawn together today by technologies that have the potential to divide us. Our thoughts of a global and ubiquitous information infrastructure are troubled by concerns that the evolving Information Society may not be accessible to everyone. The Internet Society’s motto is “Internet is for Everyone” and this international forum extends that notion in its title: “Towards an Information Society for all”.
INTERNET MANAGEMENT Limited progress on the ICANN privatisation project makes outcome uncertain. Written testimony of the Director Physical Infrastructure Issues, Peter Guerrero, The US General Accounting Office to a US Senate Committee and Sub Committee dated 12 June 2002-12-02 |