SUMMARY

This week, cyber geopolitics on Internet Governance headlines as; russian 
government reportdly discussing plans to build its own “independent internet 
infrastructure” that will be used by 
BRICS<https://eu.vocuspr.com/Tracking.aspx?Data=HHL%3d%3f4%3a6%3b%26JDG%3c%3b493919%26SDG%3c%3a0%3c2&RE=MC&RI=6031485&Preview=False&DistributionActionID=37917&Action=Follow+Link>
 member states.

At Wuzhen Conference, Chinese president Xi Jinping said on Sunday the country 
will not close its door to the global Internet, but that cyber sovereignty is 
key in its vision of Internet development. Both Tim Cook, chief executive of 
Apple, and Sundar Pichai, head of Google, attended the conference, the first 
time the Silicon Valley firms have sent such senior representation. Jack Ma, 
head of Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba also spoke at the conference. Also, at 
this conference Fatoumata Ndiaye, UNICEF deputy executive director said : 
"Protecting children online is a vital issue in internet governance, and also 
closely linked to the Sustainable Development Goals,"

Also on event, African IGF was held in Sham El Sheik (Egypt) with a new adopted 
Charter and recommendations to improve Internet Governance in Africa

On cyber extremism, the EU Internet Forum – which brings together tech firms, 
the European Commission, EU member states and law enforcement – met to discuss 
the progress made by companies in terms of the removal and vetting of extremist 
content.

On Jurisdiction, The European Union is to make a submission to the U.S. Supreme 
Court in its hearing of the U.S. Department of Justice’s appeal against a 
ruling which prevented prosecutors from gaining access to emails held by 
Microsoft in Ireland. This case raises the question whether, under the US 
Stored Communications Act, US courts can require a US-based service provider to 
produce the contents of a customer's email account stored on a server located 
outside the United States.

On data protection, European Union privacy regulators have threatened to bring 
a legal challenge to a year-old EU-U.S pact on the cross-border transfer of 
personal data if their concerns about its functioning and U.S. surveillance 
practices are not resolved by the autumn of 2018, they said in a report.

On digital economy, The EU Council today endorsed draft 
conclusions<http://www.consilium.europa.eu/media/31933/st15175en17.pdf> on the 
taxation of the digital economy to better enable the EU to speak with one voice 
in international tax discussions and to aid the EU Commission as it prepares 
draft legislation on this topic, slated for delivery in 2018.
On surveillance, US Federal authorities say they can request a U.S. tech 
company build surveillance backdoors into their products without any kind of 
court order, according to statements from 
July<https://www.documentcloud.org/documents/4320971-FISA-questions-July-2017.html#document/p18/a391108>
 released this weekend, ZDNet 
reported<http://www.zdnet.com/article/us-says-it-does-not-need-courts-to-approve-encryption-backdoors/>.
Below, informations on those topics and events as well as documents on data 
protection, net neutrality, etc..
Regards!


Find review and sources here

http://www.diplointernetgovernance.org/profiles/blogs/ig-weekly-brief-russia-on-independent-internet-china-for-cyber
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