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Opening Session, IGF 2009 November 15, 2009 - Robert Kahn and Ian Peter, pioneers of the Internet, Jerry Yang, a co-founder of Yahoo, and Tim Berners-Lee, inventor of the World Wide Web, were among the headline-makers playing important roles on the first day of the Internet Governance Forum.
The Internet continues to boom, the new growth being powered by prospect for mobile devices to sweep more people in the developing world online. According to the International Telecommunication Union there are now 4.6 billion mobile cellular subscribers, and just 600 million of them are broadband subscribers. The mobile Internet is expected to be the primary outlet for the next billion or two to be added to the 1.7 billion people now using the global network of networks tied together by the Internet protocol. This meeting of IGF was chaired by Tarek Kamel, Egyptian Minister of Communication and Information Technology. "The IGF is not just an isolated parallel process but has managed to bring on board all the relevant stakeholders and key players, as evidenced here this week," he said. "With opportunities there are also responsibilities. It is our clear responsibility to further dig into current mechanisms and propose creative models to address policy challenges."
The main theme for the 2009 meeting was "Internet Governance – Creating Opportunities for All." Those gathering for the annual four-day global IGF meeting worked to develop a common understanding of how to maximize the opportunities of the Internet. One of the looming issues for participants in this conference was the question of the extension of the IGF process past the five-year mandate set by leaders of the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) process. The Geneva Declaration - WSIS first established the "Geneva Declaration of Principles," - a common commitment to "build a people-centered, inclusive and development-oriented Information Society, where everyone can create, access, utilize and share information and knowledge, enabling individuals, communities and peoples to achieve their full potential in promoting their sustainable development and improving their quality of life, premised on the purposes and principles of the Charter of the United Nations and respecting fully and upholding the Universal Declaration of Human Rights." The second major WSIS gathering established the Tunis Agenda, which put the IGF process into motion with an initial projection of five such global gatherings before assessment of the value of the continuance of this process. The IGF process is a new model "multistakeholder" governance, in which not only governments and international organizations but also the private sector, civil society, academics, the technical community and others are invited to actively participate directly in policy dialogue. The forum is not a policy-making or decision-making body, instead encouraging the probing of challenges and opportunities to support the Internet's sustainability, robustness, security, stability and development.
The three previous meetings of IGF were held in Athens, Greece, in November 2006; Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, in November 2007; and in Hyderabad, India, in November 2008. IGF will hold its 2010 session in Vilnius, Lithuania. If there is a sixth IGF, it will take place in Nairobi, Kenya. - Senior segment producer, Janna Anderson Related documents are available at these links: A synthesis paper summarizing comments on the mandate of the IGF: Background paper developed by the United Nations Internet Governance Forum Secretariat, http://www.intgovforum.org/cms/2009/sharm_el_Sheikh/ |
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