Global Civil Society launches the Internet Social Forum - With a call to occupy 
the Internet
 
PRESS RELEASE. Geneva, Switzerland, 22st January, 2015.
 
A group of civil society organisations from around the world has announced the 
Internet Social Forum, to bring together and articulate bottom-up perspectives 
on the 'Internet we want'. Taking inspiration from the World Social Forum, and 
its clarion call, 'Another World is possible', the group seeks to draw urgent 
attention to the increasing centralization of the Internet for extraction of 
monopoly rents and for socio-political control, asserting that 'Another 
Internet is possible'!
 
The Internet Social Forum will inter alia offer an alternative to the 
recently-launched World Economic Forum's 'Net Mundial Initiative' on global 
Internet governance. While the World Economic Forum (WEF) and the 'Net Mundial 
Initiative' convene global elites, the Internet Social Forum will be a 
participatory and bottom-up space for all those who believe that the global 
Internet must evolve in the public interest; a direct parallel to the launch of 
the World Social Forum in 2001 as a counter initiative to the WEF.
 
The Internet Social Forum will reach out to grassroots groups and social 
movements across the world, catalysing a groundswell that challenges the 
entrenched elite interests that currently control how the Internet is managed. 
The Internet Social Forum's preparatory process will kick off during the World 
Social Forum to take place in Tunis, March 24th to 28th, 2015.  The Internet 
Social Forum itself is planned to be held either late 2015 or early 2016.
 
“While the world's biggest companies have every right to debate the future of 
the Internet, we are concerned that their perspectives should not drown out 
those of ordinary people who have no access to the privileged terrain WEF 
occupies – in the end it is this wider public interest that must be paramount 
in governing the Internet. We are organising the Internet Social Forum to make 
sure their voices can't be ignored in the corridors of power,” said Norbert 
Bollow, Co-Coordinator of the Just Net Coalition, which is one of the groups 
involved in the initiative.
 
The Internet Social Forum, and its preparatory process, is intended as a space 
to vision and build the 'Internet we want'. It will be underpinned by values of 
democracy, human rights and social justice. It will stand for participatory 
policy making and promote community media. It will seek an Internet that is 
truly decentralized in its architecture and based on people's full rights to 
data, information, knowledge and other 'commons' that the Internet has enabled 
the world community to generate and share.
 
Somewhat similar to Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee’s call for a ‘Magna Carta for 
the Internet', the Internet Social Forum proposes to develop a People's 
Internet Manifesto, through a bottom-up process involving all concerned social 
groups and movements, in different areas, from techies and ICT-for-development 
actors to media reform groups, democracy movements and social justice activists.
 
This year will also see the 10 year high-level review of the World Summit on 
the Information Society (WSIS), to be held in New York in December. As a 
full-scale review of a major UN summit, this will be a critical global 
political event. Since the WSIS, held in
2003 and 2005, the Internet, and what it means socially, has undergone a 
paradigm shift. The WSIS witnessed active engagement of civil society and 
technical groups as well as of business. However, currently, there seems to be 
an deliberate attempt to sideline this UN-led initiative on governance issues 
of the information society and Internet in favour of private, 
big-business-dominated initiatives like the WEF's Net Mundial Initiative. The 
Internet Social Forum, while remaining primarily a people's forum, will also 
seek to channel global civil society's engagement towards the WSIS +10 review.
 
The following organisations form the initial group that is proposing the 
Internet Social Forum, and many more are expected to join in the immediate 
future. This is an open call to progressive groups from all over the world to 
join this initiative, and participate in developing a People's Internet 
Manifesto.
 
Just Net Coalition, Global
P2P Foundation, Global
Transnational Institute, Global
Forum on Communication for Integration of our America, Regional (Latin America) 
Arab NGO Network for Development, Regional Agencia Latinoamericana de 
Información, Regional Alternative Informatics Association, Turkey Knowledge 
Commons, India Open-Root/EUROLINC, France SLFC.in, India CODE-IP Trust, Kenya 
GodlyGlobal.org, Switzerland Centre for Community Informatics Research, 
Development and Training, Canada IT for Change, India Association for Proper 
Internet Governance, Switzerland Computer Professionals Union, Philippines Free 
Press, USA Advocates of Science and Technology for the People, Philippines 
Other News, Italy Free Software Movement of India Global_Geneva, Switzerland 
Solidarius (Solidarity Economy Network), Italy All India Peoples Science 
Network, India Institute for Local Self-Reliance - Community Broadband 
Networks, USA
 
 Please contact us at [email protected] for further 
information or clarification.
 
Or the following regional contacts:
 
Europe                 Norbert Bollow          Email: 
[email protected]
Asia                     Rishab Bailey             Email: 
[email protected]
Africa                  Alex Gakaru               Email: 
[email protected]
North America     Micheal Gurstein       Email: [email protected]
South America     Sally Burch                Email: 
[email protected]

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institutions who are or have been involved in collaboration with
APC, and share the APC vision - a world in which all people have easy, equal 
and affordable access to the creative potential of information and 
communication technologies (ICTs) to improve their lives and create more 
democratic and egalitarian societies.

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