For another perspective on Google`s `net freedom` initiative.

M

 

From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of parminder
Sent: Tuesday, November 20, 2012 11:50 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [governance] Google's Fight the ITU/WCIT website

 

>From Google's sign-on campaign 



???A free and open world depends on a free and open Internet. Governments 
alone, working behind closed doors, should not direct its future. The billions 
of people around the globe who use the Internet should have a voice.???


https://www.google.com/takeaction/?utm_source=google 
<https://www.google.com/takeaction/?utm_source=google&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=112012freeandopen#make-your-voice-heard>
 &utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=112012freeandopen#make-your-voice-heard 


Dear Google; Yes, the world indeed needs an open Internet, for which reason it 
is rather awful to note that you, meaning, Google;

1) Sold the entire net neutrality campaign down the drain in the US, by first 
assuming its leadership and then entering into a self-serving agreement with 
Verizon, whereby the main means of accessing the Internet in the future - 
mobiles - are exempted from net neutrality provisions. 

2) Have recently entered into exclusive arrangements with telecos to provide 
Gmail, Google + and Google Search for free in some developing countries 
(Philippines) , and as a special low cost package exclusively of a few Internet 
services (and not the full, public Internet) in others (India), which makes a 
mockery of an open and net neutral Internet.

3) Tweak your search results, which is increasingly the main way of accessing 
locations on the Internet, in non-transparent ways, with increasing evidence 
that this is done in a manner that merely serves your own commercial interests 
and goes against consumer/ public interest, and for which reasons Google is 
currently subject to regulatory investigations in the US and EU. 

( There are hundreds of other outrages, big and small, including the fact that 
today I suddenly  see my default browser getting set for "Chrome' when I prefer 
and have always used Mozilla Firefox and never asked for the change of default.)

I cannot see anything other than effective regulation of the Internet to be 
able to check such excesses by Internet companies that are deeply compromising 
the openness of the Internet (sticking here to only to the subject of openness 
of the Internet, used in above appeal by Google). 

So, lets be honest, it is not about people versus ITU, not even, Google versus 
ITU, or even Google versus content regulation; it is Google versus any 
regulation of the Internet space so that Google, and similarly positioned 
dominant players, can have a free run over the economic, social and political 
resources of the world. 

It is very important to wage the needed struggles to keep Internet's content 
free from undue statist controls. But one needs to be careful about whom one 
chooses as partners, nay, leaders of the campaign. Remember, the lessons from 
the net neutrality campaign in the US which was sold cheap by those who assumed 
its leadership. Also, have no doubt whatsoever that ACTAs and PIPAs will come 
back in new forms, accommodating the interests of the big Internet companies 
that led the opposition in the first round. (Anyone wanting to take a bet on 
this! :) ) And. when the second round happens, since 'our leaders' would have 
crossed over, there wouldnt be much fight left to give. 

For sure, make opportunistic, tactical, alliances, but civil society needs to 
be careful not to abandon leadership of public interest causes to players who 
cannot but become turncoat and, well, betray, - sooner or later getting into 
bed with whoever is economically and politically powerful around to help their 
business prosper. Such is the structural logic of big business. Let them stick 
to what they do best - organise productive forces of the world. Leave public 
interest causes to public interest players - civil society and governments. 
However, if the sentiment is simply overflowing, maybe just donate some money 
to such causes, in an arms- lenght /hands-off approach vis a vis managing the 
precise activities involved. I simply dont fancy corporate-led 'public 
interest' campaigns. 

One was stuck by the number of Google organised panels at the Baku IGF, where 
they openly took part and gave their policy pitch. As a participant from 
Pakistan said at a workshop ' I find a Google representative at every panel 
that I am at'. Such brash presence at policy forums and taking strong policy 
positions by corporates is a relatively new game, and to my mind not a welcome 
thing for our democracies. I keep hoping that civil society would give this 
phenomenon a deeper thought and analysis, rather than just riding the 
bandwagon. 

parminder 

On Wednesday 21 November 2012 04:47 AM, Fouad Bajwa wrote:

Just saw Google's Fight the ITU/WCIT website

 
https://www.google.com/intl/en/takeaction/
https://www.google.com/intl/fr/takeaction/
https://www.google.com/intl/es/takeaction/
https://www.google.com/intl/ar/takeaction/
https://www.google.com/intl/zh-CN/takeaction/
https://www.google.com/intl/pt-BR/takeaction/
https://www.google.com/intl/ru/takeaction/
 
(thanks to a colleague for sharing!)
 

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