Surveillance, laws and governments vs. Internet rights – WS 07 2018: Difference between revisions

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[[Consolidated programme 2018|'''Consolidated programme 2018 overview''']]<br /><br />
6 June 2018 | 11:00-12:30 | CENTRAL ROOM | [[image:Icon_remote_20px.png | remote participation | link=http://j.mp/EuroDIG18RP3]]<br />
[[Consolidated programme 2018| '''Consolidated programme 2018 overview''']]
== <span class="dateline">Get involved!</span> ==  
== <span class="dateline">Get involved!</span> ==  
You are invited to become a member of the session Org Team by subscribing to the [https://list.eurodig.org/mailman/listinfo/ws7 '''mailing list'''].
You are invited to become a member of the session Org Team by subscribing to the [https://list.eurodig.org/mailman/listinfo/ws7 '''mailing list'''].

Revision as of 19:36, 1 June 2018

6 June 2018 | 11:00-12:30 | CENTRAL ROOM | remote participation
Consolidated programme 2018 overview

You are invited to become a member of the session Org Team by subscribing to the mailing list. If you would just like to leave a comment feel free to use the discussion-page here at the wiki. Please contact wiki@eurodig.org to get access to the wiki.

Session teaser

Internet created new abilities and made development easier. Ether for realization, ether for violation of basic rights. Governments vs. Societies, Freedoms vs. Surveillance. Laws: inherited, newly developed, implemented, planned. We'll make short review on current situation in Europe (and close neighborhood) and discuss possible reactions and developments.

Keywords

Laws, Survellance, LEAs, Basic Human Rights, Internet Rights, Resistance

Session description

Do government action and regulations harm our digital rights or do they protect them? Some advocate that, in tradition of the early Internet, regulators only bring harm to innovation and free exercise of digital rights and hamper key principles of the Internet. Others call for more regulation in order to fight crime and abuse in digital spaces and keep the Internet safe for its users. Some political systems approach the Internet more radically than others. If the truth is in a balance, the question remains, how to strike this happy medium. Is a productive dialogue between stakeholders realistic when it comes to laws? In this workshop we will debate opposing takes on the matter to provide a landscape of opinions about how government regulations positively or negatively, directly and indirectly affect our rights online

Format

  1. Introduction by moderator
  2. Two statements to spark the debate - one in favour, one against regulation (we don't have to deal in absolutes. Rather narratives of what works well and what or where it doesn't.)
  3. Q&A with key participants based on an set of questions we can define beforehand
  4. Open the discussion to the room
  5. Wrap-up

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: Website of EuroDIG

People

Please provide name and institution for all people you list here.

Focal Point

  • Alexander Isavnin

Organising Team (Org Team)

Farzaneh Badii, Elisabeth Schauermann, Alexander Isavnin and WS7 mailinglist participants.

Key Participants

Name Affiliation Short CV
Martina Ferracane Research associate @ ECIPE Martina is an policy advisor on digital transformation. Her interests include data Privacy, cyber security, cross-border data flows, internet governance and digital skills.
Natalia Goderdzishvili Ministry of Justice of Georgia As a lawyer and international relations specialist in the Data Exchange Agency of the Ministry of Justice of Georgia is interested in balancing privacy and other human rights with cyber security and data protection challenges in nowadays digital governance models.
Alexander Isavnin RosKomSvoboda, head of International Cooperation Alexander Isavnin is network technology professional, interested in

protection and development of Human Rights in the Internet ecosystem

Peter Kimpian Data Protection Unit, Council of Europe Peter Kimpian working at the Data Protection Unit of the Council of Europe, having an interest in how the rights to pricavy and to data protection are balanced with law enforcement interests in different fields in the Digital Age.
Laurin Weissinger University of Oxford Researches IT-Security, notably trust relations, risk, and networks in defensive security.
Elisabeth Schauermann YOUthDIG Elisabeth Schauermann is a coordinator within the German project "Love-Storm - United Against Hate Online" and has been involved in digital human rights and Internet Governance since 2016. She co-organizes YOUthDIG.

Moderator

  • Martina Ferracane/Alexander Isavnin

Remote Moderator

  • Elisabeth Schauermann

Reporter

Reporters will be assigned by the EuroDIG secretariat in cooperation with the Geneva Internet Platform. The Reporter takes notes during the session and formulates 3 (max. 5) bullet points at the end of each session that:

  • are summarised on a slide and presented to the audience at the end of each session
  • relate to the particular session and to European Internet governance policy
  • are forward looking and propose goals and activities that can be initiated after EuroDIG (recommendations)
  • are in (rough) consensus with the audience

Current discussion, conference calls, schedules and minutes

See the discussion tab on the upper left side of this page. Please use this page to publish:

  • dates for virtual meetings or coordination calls
  • short summary of calls or email exchange

Please be as open and transparent as possible in order to allow others to get involved and contact you. Use the wiki not only as the place to publish results but also to summarize the discussion process.

Messages

A short summary of the session will be provided by the Reporter.

Video record

Will be provided here after the event.

Transcript

Will be provided here after the event.