https://digitalpeace.microsoft.com/

"We are digital citizens—members of a thriving online global society. We trust 
technology to help us do our jobs, create communities and connect us. As 
digital citizens, we also share responsibility to protect our interconnected 
space.

We are more at risk than ever before from cyberwarfare. Governments are using 
technology as a weapon, which can devastate people, organizations, and entire 
countries. These attacks may start in the digital space but can quickly spread 
to the physical world. We must come together as digital citizens and call upon 
our world leaders to create rules of the road that protect our digital society.

We must demand Digital Peace Now." 

--

Dear nettimers,

any comments on this? I find this pretty stunning. OK, 100 years after World 
War I, that’s pretty significant. "Make love, not war." Today there's 
conference in Paris. I am an anti-militarist, I am not on the side of the 
corporate-governmental (cyber)warfare promotors. But in general I am not 
against non-violent conflict. Should we demand digital conflict? Or digital 
‘struggle'?

And what to make of the comments by US internet governance scholar Milton 
Mueller? 

https://www.internetgovernance.org/2018/11/09/the-paris-igf-convergence-on-norms-or-grand-illusion/
 
<https://www.internetgovernance.org/2018/11/09/the-paris-igf-convergence-on-norms-or-grand-illusion/>

"The theory of international regimes identifies norm development as the second 
step in a process of institutionalization. The first step involves agreement on 
principles; that is, foundational facts about the sector or domain to be 
governed. It is unfortunate, but true, to say that all of the international 
calls for cyber norms have skipped agreement on principles and are trying to 
promulgate norms despite a huge, gaping chasm in the way states understand 
their role in cyberspace. There will be no effective operationalization of 
norms until there is agreement on the status of cyberspace as a global commons, 
a non-sovereign space."

Your messenger of peace, Geert






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