You can download the program by following this link
2010 Program.pdf
When: Wednesday, July 21, 2010
Where: Georgetown University Law Center
600 New Jersey Ave., N.W., Washington, DC
To Enter the Law Center, please use the Tower Green/F Street
Entrance, or the 2nd Street Entrance
The IGF-USA is a multi-stakeholder national event to bring together
business, civil society, government, technologists/researchers, and
academia in discussions about topics that are being deliberated at
a global level regarding governance of the Internet, including
management of critical Internet resources, privacy, cyber-security,
access, openness/freedom of expression, child online safety,
capacity building and development. The IGF USA will also provide a
report to the global IGF, being held in Vilnius, Lithuania, in
September.
Program
8:15 Registration and Continental Breakfast
9:00-9:45 Opening Ceremony
Marilyn Cade, ICT Strategies, Moderator
• Welcome: Judith C. Areen, Interim Dean and Paul Regis Dean
Professor of Law, Georgetown Law
• Introductory Remarks: Pablo G. Molina, CIO, Georgetown Law
• Remarks: Markus Kummer, Executive Coordinator, Internet
Governance Forum
• Remarks: Ambassador Philip Verveer, US State Department
9:45 -10:00 Coffee Break
10:15-11:45 Workshops and Scenario Breakout Sessions:
1. A National Framework for Cyber security: The U.S. Approach and
Implications for Internet Governance Discussions
Cyber security is a multi-faceted issue and requires attention to
both strategic and operational efforts to make progress. Five
overarching areas for focus include (1) development of a national
strategy; (2) collaboration between government and industry; (3)
combating cyber crime; (4) incident response; and (5) building a
culture of cyber security/awareness.
This session will explore how the U.S. is addressing each of the
areas, where there are opportunities for improvement and obstacles
to progress, where we need to work with international partners, and
how cyber security contributes to Internet Governance globally. The
panelists will share their initiatives, successes and observations
in these five areas, followed by interactive engagement with the
session participants.
Moderators: Liesyl Franz, Vice President, Information Security and
Global Public Policy, TechAmerica; and Audrey Plonk, Global
Security and Internet Policy Specialist, Intel Corporation
Panelists:
Cheri McGuire, Director, Critical Infrastructure & Cyber
security, Trustworthy Computing, Microsoft and Chair, Information
Technology Sector Coordinating Council (IT-SCC)
Don Codling, Unit Chief, Federal Bureau of Investigation
Scott Algeier, Executive Director, IT Information Sharing and
Analysis Center (IT-ISAC)
Greg Nojeim, Senior Counsel and Director, Project on Freedom,
Security and Technology, Center for Democracy and Technology
Adam Palmer, Norton Lead Cyber Security Advisor, Symantec
Corporation
Scenario Breakout Sessions:
Scenarios are a way of examining trends and possible futures that
recognizes drivers and external activities that affect outcomes, in
our case, of Internet governance. These sessions will use an
adaptation of scenario thinking to examine and discuss three
possible futures for Internet Governance by the year 2020. The
discussion from the breakouts will form the basis of a plenary
session later in the afternoon, and contribute to input into the
IGF 2010 in Vilnius from the IGF USA.
2. Scenario: Internet Islands:
Facilitators: Garland McCoy, Andrew Mack, Iren Borissova
It’s the year 2010. Government, businesses, civil society and
citizens everywhere have recognized the transformational power of
the Internet as it creates a new world that is connected as never
before. However, by 2020 the unitary Internet as we know it is no
more. Concerns over national security and cybercrime concerns lead
to calls for “safe zones” on the net. Governments tax e-commerce as
a way to address budget deficits and trade barriers are
constructed, closing off markets for goods and information.
Mega-companies construct their own walls to keep criminals out and
customers in. At the same time the digital divide grows quickly as
poorer nations and smaller companies cannot afford to keep up with
the new security requirements and the entry fees needed to gain
entry to the secure parts of the web. Large parts of the world find
themselves “outside the wall” and are left to fend for themselves,
facing a combination of rapacious criminals, radical groups and
bottom-feeding enterprises selling high cost security services.
For those on an Internet Island, life goes on, albeit in a more
limited way than before. Those without access are literally adrift,
as advances in finance, education, healthcare and transportation –
all dependent on the free moving data – are cut off.
3. Scenario: Global Government for the Internet
Facilitators: Steve DelBianco; Walda Roseman; Janice LeChance
Most of us assume that the ICT industry, media companies, and NGOs
will continue to be the leading players on the Internet stage, with
governments playing just a supporting role. This scenario describes
an alternate future, where citizens and industry worldwide demand
that their governments take center stage to clean up an Internet
that had become infected with dangerous content and criminal
conduct.
4. Scenario: Users Reign
Facilitators: Jonathan Godfrey, Dan O’Neill; Pablo Molina
Social networks and online applications ‘in the clouds are far
advanced by 2020; and in many ways, innovation and users’ rights
are drivers. The economic crisis and environmental concerns from
the early days of the 2010-2012 years have been addressed in a way
that has seemingly calmed and addressed concerns about privacy and
security in the online worlds. Introduction of mandated digital
citizenship training in preschools and primary schools has spread
around the world. Advances in software and other technological
advances have made it possible to rely on network [cloud] based
language translation and young people, in particular are avid, and
full users of the always switched on world of applications and
services.
However, the advent of the always, switched on world has introduced
a new form of digital divide – the divide between millineuls, and
the ‘other users’ of the online world. The reliance on appliances
and networks drives huge consumption of energy, and the search for
solutions in energy and disposal of ‘e-waste’ continues.
Climate change and environmental pressures have continued to grow,
and the formerly called developing countries have established
strict prohibition rules against digital dumping, of both physical
and ‘soft’ waste, but these are largely undertaken via voluntary
efforts focused at consumer awareness and much easier to use
mechanisms to deal with disposal and impact on the environment.
However, the role of intellectual property protection is unclear,
and in many ways, users are left on their own to find solutions to
challenges they encounter ‘online’.
11:45-1:00 Networking Lunch is provided – Hart Auditorium Reception
Area
1:15-3:00 Concurrent Workshops:
5. Workshop: The Promise and Challenges of Cloud Computing
Cloud Computing holds great promise both to customers and
entrepreneurs, in the United States and around the world. Cloud
computing offers users—including governments and enterprises—the
opportunity to pay only for the computing they use rather than
maintaining all their computing needs and resources themselves. For
innovators, the cloud offers a greatly reduced cost of entry into a
market heretofore dominated by big players.
However, there are policy challenges to be addressed. Fully
realizing this potential requires unprecedented cooperation between
the industry, consumers and governments to ensure individual
privacy, data security and ensure confidence in the remote storage
of critical information. Not all are optimistic about the future of
cloud computing because of the centralization of personal
information, concentrated threats to security and the questions it
raises about national sovereignty.
This panel will explore some of the opportunities that cloud
computing represents as well as challenges and potential pitfalls
in the public policy arena which could make or break those
opportunities in the coming years.
Moderator: Jonathan Zuck, President, Association for Competitive
Technology
Panelists:
John Morris, General Counsel, CDT
Dan Castro, Senior Analyst, ITIF
Jack Seuss, Vice President of Information Technology/CIO,
University of Maryland
Evan Burfield, Chairman and CEO, Synteractive
Marc Berejka, Policy Advisor, Office of the Secretary, Department
of Commerce
Respondent: Michael J. Nelson, Visiting Professor, University of
Georgetown
6. Workshop: Critical Internet Resources
This panel focuses not only on the “what” of critical Internet
resources but on how to ensure that the underlying principles that
have led to the Internet’s success persist in the face of security
challenges. These principles include openness (open standards, open
technologies), accessibility transparency, bottom-up
decision-making, cooperation and multi-stakeholder engagement. Key
to implementing these principles is also a broadened understanding
of the role of the infrastructure providers, such as global and
national Internet Services/Connectivity providers who build and
operate the backbones and edge networks. The panel will also
address some of the implications for the implementation of DNSSEC
and IPv6 on a national basis that contribute to the security and
resiliency of CIR on a global basis.
Moderator: Robert Guerra, Freedom House
Panelists:
Trent Adams, ISOC
Matt Larson, VeriSign
Steve Ryan, ARIN
Patrick Jones, ICANN
Jeff Brueggeman, AT&T
7. Workshop: e-Crimes and Malicious Use in the DNS: Implications
and
Observations
The online world and the Internet are continuing to expand at
exponential rates, with the rapid spread of the Internet into
broadband and mobile. As more and more users, and more applications
move into the online world, concerns about online crimes and
malicious threats to the Internet and to users also grow.
This workshop will examine the range and scope of the kinds of
online crimes and malicious use of the Domain Name System. For
instance, scam artists are hiding identity by hosting a website
with false information, or a phisher registers a domain intended to
resemble a famous brand. Consumers and businesses can be victims of
abuse, and legitimate service providers are seeing crime and fraud
in the network.
This session covers some of very real time examples of the fight
against DNS‐related abuse such as phishing, malware and fraudulent
uses of domain names. Members of the panel will also comment on the
scope and growth expected in various kinds of fraud and abuse as
the domain name space continues to grow exponentially and the use
of DNS Security (DNSSEC) as part of a mitigation strategy.
.
Moderator: Jim Galvin, Title: Director, Strategic Relationships and
Technical Standards, Afilias
Panelists:
Garth Bruen, KNUJON
Doug Isenberg, Attorney at Law, GigaLawFirm – remote
participant
Shaundra Watson, Counsel for International Consumer
Protection
Federal Trade Commission (FTC)
John Berryhill, Intellectual Property Lawyer
Bobbie Flaim, FBI
Margie Milam, Senior Policy Advisor, ICANN
Matt Serlin, MarkMonitor – remote participant
Respondents: Suzanne Sene, NTIA
Sarah Deutsch, Verizon
8. Best Practice Forum: Considerations on Youth Online Safety in
an
“always switched on” world
The topic of youth experiences on line are drawing attention in the
US, and around the globe. During 2010, in the U.S., discussions,
and activities received both governmental and private sector
attention, and a new report was provided to the U.S. Congress:
“Youth Safety on a Living Internet” in early June.
The topics addressed by this report -- risks young people face; the
status of industry voluntary efforts; practices related to record
retention; and the development of approaches and technologies to
shield children from inappropriate content or experiences via the
Internet --is also a very active topic in global arenas, including
the global IGF 2010, to be held in Lithuania, in September. In
fact, the discussions on a global basis seem to mirror and reflect
the topics examined by the Online Safety and Technology Working
Group and the questions and topics that will be discussed in this
forum.
Moderator: Danny Weitzner, Associate Administrator, Office of
Policy Analysis and Development U.S. Department of Commerce
Panelists:
Michael W. McKeehan, Executive Director, Internet and Technology
Policy, Verizon
Braden Cox, Policy Counsel, NetChoice Coalition
Anne Collier, via remote participation [Invited]
Jennifer Hanley, Family Online Safety Institute (FOSI)
Stacie Rumenap, Stop Child Predators
Respondents:
Morgan C. Little, Elon University Graduate, Political Science,
American University
Jane Coffin, NTIA: comments on some of the global activities
Bessie Pang, Executive Director, POLCYB
3:00-3:15 Break
3:15-5:15 Afternoon Plenary Session
3:15-3:45 Speaker: Andrew McLaughlin, Deputy Chief Technology
Officer, Internet
Policy, White House
3:50 Outcomes of Scenario Stories – Implications for the Internet
Governance
Debate and for the IGF
Presentations of Scenarios and Observations for Internet
Governance:
“Internet Islands”; “Global Government for the Internet”; “Users
Reign”
Moderator: Marilyn Cade
Panel of Respondents and Audience Participation:
Marc Rotenberg, Executive Director, Electronic Privacy
Information Center (EPIC)
Rebecca MacKinnon, New America Foundation
Milton Mueller, Professor, Syracuse University School of
Information Studies; XS4All Professor, Delft University of
Technology [Remote]
Michael J. Nelson, Professor, Georgetown University
Phil Bond, President and CEO, TechAmerica
Leslie Martinkovics, Verizon Communications
Richard Beaird, Senior Deputy United States Coordinator for
International Communications and Information Policy, U.S Department
of State
Kirsten Bennett, Communications Fellow, Elon University
Audience Participants
Summing Up: Moderator
5:00 - 5:30 Closing Session - Introduction by Fiona Alexander,
Associate Administrator,
Office of International Affairs, NTIA
Markus Kummer, Executive Secretariat, IGF
Remarks: Larry Strickling, Assistant Secretary for Communications
and
Information and Administrator, National Telecommunications and
Information Administration (NTIA), U.S. Department of Commerce
IGF 2010 in Vilnius, Lithuania
Invitation to Reception: ISOC DC Chapter
5:30-7:00 Reception for participants and invited guests - Onsite at
Georgetown Law