Dear colleagues, 

More than 1,500 people gathered in Geneva, Switzerland, from 25-29 May for the 
tenth annual WSIS (World Summit on the Information Society) Forum. Organised by 
the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), the agenda of the WSIS Forum 
is a mix of policy statements from ITU Member States and other Internet-related 
organisations (including ICANN and the Internet Society), and workshops on 
specific issues such as cybersecurity, capacity building and the IANA 
stewardship transition. RIPE NCC Executive Board member Salam Yamout took part 
as a panelist in a session on "Fostering Open Access to International Fiber”:
http://www.itu.int/net4/wsis/forum/2015/Agenda/Session/214

The event also provided opportunities to discuss the upcoming WSIS+10 review, 
which will be primarily an inter-governmental process looking back at progress 
made on achieving the goals of the original WSIS events in 2003 and 2005. 

Webcast archives of all WSIS Forum sessions are available at: 
http://www.itu.int/net4/wsis/forum/2015/Agenda/Webcast/Archive


IANA Stewardship at WSIS Forum 2015
The agenda included a panel session, "IANA Stewardship Transition – A Live 
Example of a Multistakeholder Process", which focused on the processes involved 
in developing a proposal for future stewardship of the IANA functions:
http://www.itu.int/net4/wsis/forum/2015/Agenda/Session/269

The panel included representatives of the three IANA "affected communities" 
(names, numbers and protocol parameters), along with speakers from business, 
academia/civil society and government. While some governments noted that 
participation in these kinds of processes is still challenging, there was 
general agreement that the IANA stewardship transition represents an important 
example of the multistakeholder model being applied to global policy 
decision-making. 


Looking Ahead to WSIS+10
Many of the governments and organisations that delivered policy statements 
during the WSIS Forum noted the upcoming WSIS+10 review, which will culminate 
in a two-day High Level Meeting of the General Assembly this December. The 
process (or "modalities") leading up to this meeting are still being 
determined, as are the likely outcomes, though the preparation process will 
kick off in earnest during the week of 8-12 June, with an Expert Group Meeting 
on “Advancing a Sustainable Information Society for All”, followed by two days 
of intergovernmental discussions: 
http://unpan3.un.org/wsis10/

The focus of many participants at the WSIS Forum was the importance of 
highlighting the WSIS commitment to and focus on development, with some even 
suggesting moves to explicitly link the WSIS Action Lines (developed as part of 
the 2003-2005 process) to the UN's Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which 
will replace the Millennium Development Goals (which expire shortly) and shape 
the UN's global development efforts. The ITU has published a matrix detailing 
possible linkages between the specific WSIS Action Lines and SDGs:
http://www.itu.int/net4/wsis/sdg/Content/wsis-sdg_matrix_document.pdf

Others noted, however, that such linkages are unlikely, as the SDGs themselves 
are in the final stages of a multi-year negotiation process. 

Alongside the official WSIS Forum programme, several technical, civil society 
and academic organisations organised an informational WSIS+10 lunch during the 
week, which highlighted the importance of coordination and information sharing 
between all stakeholders involved, particularly given the uncertainties still 
surrounding the process. 

More information on the lunch is available at: 
http://www.diplomacy.edu/calendar/way-forward-wsis10-review-process


If you have any questions or comments about the WSIS Forum or the ongoing 
WSIS+10 preparations, please feel free reply to this email or to raise them 
here on the RIPE Cooperation Working Group mailing list.

Best regards,

Chris Buckridge
Senior External Relations Officer
RIPE NCC


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