Safeguarding the future – The role of Internet Impact Assessment – BigStage 2021: Difference between revisions

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Working title: <big>'''Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit by ISOC'''</big><br /><br />
Working title: <big>'''Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit by ISOC'''</big><br /><br />
== Session teaser ==
== Session teaser ==
Until <span class="dateline">{{2021-Date-02}}</span>.
How do you know if a particular policy, development, or trend threatens the Internet’s foundation? And if so, what should you do next? This presentation provides an overview of a new initiative by the Internet Society: the Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit (IIAT).


== Session description ==  
== Session description ==  
Until <span class="dateline">{{2021-Date-02}}</span>.
The Internet has been revolutionary for human progress. Bit by bit, byte by byte, it has come to underpin modern life. For those of us online today it is hard to imagine (or remember) a world where the Internet was not the fabric of our social lives, education, entertainment, innovation, and culture. But what fundamentally makes up the Internet, and what it could grow to become in the future, is rooted in its architecture as a model for how you interconnect networks at a global scale.


Always use your own words to describe your session. If you decide to quote the words of an external source, give them the due respect and acknowledgement by specifying the source.
In 2020 the Internet Society released the Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit to support policymakers, technologists, and other Internet users and advocates to assess the implications of change – whether those are policy interventions or new technologies.
 
This presentation provides an overview of the toolkit, how it can be used, and why impact assessments should be the new norm for Internet policy going forward.  


== Format ==  
== Format ==  
Until <span class="dateline">{{2021-Date-02}}</span>.
The format of this session is a traditional presentation.
 
Big Stage format was introduced in 2020 in order to give space to single topic presentations, product presentations, inventors or innovative entertaining formats.
 
This can be for instance:
*A traditional presentation
*an interview or a tandem effort
*a fire side chat including max. 3 people (for instance one moderator interviewing 2 different opponents).
*a movie
 
It cannot be:
*a panel discussion.
 
Let us know here what you want to do.


== Further reading ==  
== Further reading ==  
Links to relevant websites, declarations, books, documents. Please note we cannot offer web space, so only links to external resources are possible. Example for an external link: [http://www.eurodig.org/ Main page of EuroDIG]
*https://www.internetsociety.org/issues/internet-way-of-networking/internet-impact-assessment-toolkit/
*https://www.internetsociety.org/resources/doc/2020/internet-impact-assessment-toolkit/critical-properties-of-the-internet/


== People ==  
== People ==  
Until <span class="dateline">20 Mai 2021</span>.
Presenter
 
*Carl Gahnberg
Key participants:
:Carl Gahnberg is a Senior Policy Advisor at the Internet Society (ISOC), where he is focused on issues related to Internet governance. In this role, Carl contributes the organization’s global policy development and its partnerships with international and regional organizations, engaging with global policy makers and non-governmental stakeholders on key Internet issues.  
 
Please provide name and institution for all people you list here.
 
Example for a list:
*Person 1
*Person 2


== Video record ==
== Video record ==

Revision as of 17:47, 15 June 2021

29 June 2021/30 June 2021 | 13:15-14:15 CEST (TBD) | Studio A
BigStage 2021 overview

Final title of the session: Please send the final title as early as possible, latest until to wiki@eurodig.org. Do not edit the title of the page at the wiki on your own. The link to your session may otherwise disappear.

Working title: Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit by ISOC

Session teaser

How do you know if a particular policy, development, or trend threatens the Internet’s foundation? And if so, what should you do next? This presentation provides an overview of a new initiative by the Internet Society: the Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit (IIAT).

Session description

The Internet has been revolutionary for human progress. Bit by bit, byte by byte, it has come to underpin modern life. For those of us online today it is hard to imagine (or remember) a world where the Internet was not the fabric of our social lives, education, entertainment, innovation, and culture. But what fundamentally makes up the Internet, and what it could grow to become in the future, is rooted in its architecture as a model for how you interconnect networks at a global scale.

In 2020 the Internet Society released the Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit to support policymakers, technologists, and other Internet users and advocates to assess the implications of change – whether those are policy interventions or new technologies.

This presentation provides an overview of the toolkit, how it can be used, and why impact assessments should be the new norm for Internet policy going forward.

Format

The format of this session is a traditional presentation.

Further reading

People

Presenter

  • Carl Gahnberg
Carl Gahnberg is a Senior Policy Advisor at the Internet Society (ISOC), where he is focused on issues related to Internet governance. In this role, Carl contributes the organization’s global policy development and its partnerships with international and regional organizations, engaging with global policy makers and non-governmental stakeholders on key Internet issues.

Video record

Will be provided here after the event.