WS 05 2026: Difference between revisions
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'''Key Participants''' | '''Key Participants''' | ||
On theme 1, success stories, key participant 1, '''Alena Muravska''' | *On theme 1, success stories, key participant 1, '''Alena Muravska''' | ||
On theme 2, reality check, key participant 2, '''Peter Thomassen''' | *On theme 2, reality check, key participant 2, '''Peter Thomassen''' | ||
On theme 3, key participant 3, '''Suncica Rosic''' | *On theme 3, key participant 3, '''Suncica Rosic''' | ||
On theme 4, key participant 4, '''Karen Mulberry''' | *On theme 4, key participant 4, '''Karen Mulberry''' | ||
The discussion will be moderated by '''Matthias C. Kettemann''' | *The discussion will be moderated by '''Matthias C. Kettemann''' | ||
== Messages == | == Messages == | ||
Revision as of 20:32, 22 April 2026
27 May 2026 | 14:30 - 15:30 CEST | Room A
Consolidated programme 2026
Workshops are organised in a multi-stakeholder bottom up manner. Anyone interested in the topic can become a member of the Org Team. The EuroDIG session principles must be followed.
All sections of this page should be completed by 30 April 2026.
Please use the discussion tab as a sandbox and collaborative space for the Org Team. You can post there meeting minutes, resources and timelines. It will help new Org Team members to catch up.
DO NOT edit the title of the page yourself, the link to your session may otherwise disappear. Please send an updated title as early as possible to wiki@eurodig.org.
Title: Internet Standards and Frontier Technologies: Lessons from the Past, Tasks for Today, Choices for the Future
Proposals: #17, #46, #47
Get involved!
You are invited to become a member of the Session Org Team by simply subscribing to the mailing list. By doing so, you agree that your name and affiliation will be published at the relevant session wiki page. Please reply to the email send to you to confirm your subscription.
Kindly note that it may take a while until the Org Team is formed and starts working.
Check the discussion tab and the mailing list archive for information on the development of the session.
Starting from a review of Internet standards, this session examines how open standards can help deliver the Internet we want: resilient, secure, interoperable and inclusive, especially in a time of rapid technological and political change.
As debates on the future of Internet governance continue beyond WSIS+20, one question is becoming increasingly urgent: how do we preserve an open, secure and interoperable Internet while integrating new and more complex technologies?
The Internet’s success has long depended on open standards developed in multistakeholder processes and adopted across networks on a voluntary basis. This model enabled innovation, resilience and global interoperability. But today, the deployment of more complex, automation-dependent and sometimes non-backwards-compatible technologies is putting that model under pressure. At the same time, policymakers are taking a growing interest in standards-setting, while technologies such as AI, quantum computing and other frontier innovations are reshaping the technical and political environment in which the Internet evolves.
Session description
This session asks what we can learn from the Internet’s own history to guide the next phase of technological governance. It looks at the gap between standards development and standards deployment; the economics of adoption, including first-mover disadvantage; and the roles of governments, the technical community, the private sector and civil society in turning open standards into operational reality.
Bringing together technical and non-technical perspectives in the Brussels policy context, the session will explore how multistakeholder cooperation can help align public objectives and technical feasibility - and how standards can remain a practical tool for building the Internet we want.
Format
This workshop will start with inputs from key participants and be structured around four key questions:
(1) Success stories: What lessons from the Internet’s early governance and standards-setting model still matter today?
(2) Reality check: What are the main barriers to legitimate and effective standards-setting and uptake today (technical complexity, deployment challenges, weak incentives, or lack of coordination) and how can they be addressed?
(3) Inclusion and multistakeholder approaches: How can we ensure that all stakeholders are included and that standards are developed fairly and in a spirit of solidarity and inclusion?
(4) Future readiness: How should policymakers, the technical community, and other stakeholders work together on Internet standards in the age of AI, quantum and other frontier technologies, without undermining the Open Internet?
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: Main page of EuroDIG
People
Programme Committee member(s)
- Milica Vesović, Programme Manager in the Digital Development Unit, Directorate of Security, Integrity and Rule of Law at the Council of Europe
- Filip Lukáš, Policy Advisor at CENTR
- Regina Filipová Fuchsová, Industry Relations Manager at EURid
The Programme Committee (PC) supports the programme planning process throughout the year and works closely with the Secretariat. Members of the PC give advice on the topics, cluster the proposals and assist session organisers in their work. They also ensure that session principles are followed and monitor the complete programme to avoid repetition. 1-2 PC members have signed up to each session and will compile the messages.
Focal Point
- Matthias C. Kettemann, University of Innsbruck, Department of Legal Theory and Future of Law
Focal Points take over the responsibility and lead of the session organisation. They work in close cooperation with the Programme Committee and the EuroDIG Secretariat and are kindly requested to follow EuroDIG’s session principles
Organising Team (Org Team)
List Org Team members here as they sign up.
- André Melancia, Technical community, Portugal
- David Frautschy, Internet Society
- Alena Muravska, RIPE NCC
- Peter Thomassen, desec.io
- Karen Mulberry, Senior Manager, Public Affairs, IEEE Standards Association (IEEE SA)
- Suncica Rosic, Central European University - Private University
- Barbara Jantzen
The Org Team is a group of people shaping the session. Org Teams are open and every interested individual can become a member by subscribing to the mailing list.
Key Participants
- On theme 1, success stories, key participant 1, Alena Muravska
- On theme 2, reality check, key participant 2, Peter Thomassen
- On theme 3, key participant 3, Suncica Rosic
- On theme 4, key participant 4, Karen Mulberry
- The discussion will be moderated by Matthias C. Kettemann
Messages
The Programme Committee is responsible for taking notes during the session and to formulate 3 (max. 5) bullet points that are presented at the end of each session. The audience shall agree on the messages in (rough) consensus.
Messages should:
- reflect the discussion in the particular session
- relate to European Internet governance policy
- be forward looking and propose goals and activities
Video record
Will be provided here after the event.
Transcript
Will be provided here after the event.