Users Reign.pdf
Internet Islands.pdf
Global Government for the Internet.pdf
Internet Islands
The Rise of Digital Fortresses and the end of the Digital
Republic
A Futures Scenario
It’s late in 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 – culturally,
politically, economically and in dozens of other ways.
Millions of new users join the Internet revolution every day,
mostly through the proliferation of mobile devices like web-enabled
cell phones. Some 8-10 million new users a month go online in Asia
alone, and the explosive growth extends to Africa and other areas,
making Internet a reality for many “bottom of the pyramid” women
and men. New undersea cables landing in East and West Africa,
combined with new broadband policies and the diffusion of
technology advances such as WiMax have created a true “tipping
point”.
Governments now offer new e-services to their citizens, paving the
way for real advances toward the “Millennium Development Goals”.
NGOs mobilize citizens through social networking tools, responding
to situations from stolen elections to natural disasters like the
earthquake in Haiti, and promoting education and online privacy.
And businesses reach out to their customers like never before,
learning more about customer needs and preferences and building
robust e-businesses.
Internet governance is provided through a loose network of
multi-stakeholder organizations like ICANN, the ITU and the
Internet Governance Forum, with volunteers doing much of the work.
Though budgets for ICANN and the ITU continue to grow, private
sector actors still play a strong role. Privacy and Intellectual
Property issues receive significant attention, and slowly, the
influence of new voices such as delegates from Africa and Latin
America are growing. The system is unorthodox by historical
standards, but it is working, supporting one, unified Internet for
all.
However, storm clouds are on the horizon. By 2015 the world will be
very different…
Following a series of attacks from a series of radical groups, a
group of African states – citing the use of the net by terrorist
groups and the need for national security – moves to increasingly
monitor access to the web, eventually suspending traffic
originating from suspect nations.
At the same time, the once-booming world of e-commerce has become
“contaminated” by a tsunami of phishing, pharming, and an
exponential increase in spam. Scams and outright theft, run by
competing international crime syndicates, lead to widespread
consumer concern. A new, more virulent form of the Conficker worm
temporarily shuts down nearly all the banks in a large developing
economy. Loud calls can be heard in the US Congress and around the
world for “safe spaces” to work, play and purchase goods.
And, while some countries had slowly recovered from the economic
crisis of 2009-2010, in 2015 most OECD nations still face record
levels of unemployment and huge budget deficits. Populist
politicians and businesses alike embrace calls for protectionism
and other trade preferences, calls that extend to all corners of
the web and e-commerce. The equivalent of e-commerce “toll booths”
are set up for cross-border transactions as a way of encouraging
firms to “buy local”. Companies – concerned about IP protection –
move aggressively to data mine their best customers and give them
incentives to stay within company websites, while Governments take
advantage of the web as a source of revenue, increasingly taxing
e-commerce and trying to establish the equivalent of tariffs for
internet transactions outside national borders.
International, stakeholder-driven Internet governance institutions
are increasingly marginalized, as pressure from all sides overwhelm
the deliberative, bottom up, consultative nature of the process. A
coalition of countries seeking more Government control loudly push
for action in these forums, leading the coalition to walk out when
NGO and privacy groups stall a move for greater state control.
The American higher education system struggles to remain
competitive and relevant faced with the increase of commercial
education offerings, as the employment market increasingly demands
lifelong learning and training – irrespective of geography or
time.
Finally, a radical Middle Eastern government, reacting to continual
challenges from groups pushing for modernization and information
access, takes action. They express concerns about cultural,
religious and linguistic “contamination” brought on by the
Internet. They decry the slow roll out of local-script IDNs and
follow the lead of China and Israel in offering locally-recognized
IDNs that are not part of the global root table. National religious
leaders argue that, to preserve their culture and language, they
should create a “culturally pure” local Internet space.
By 2020 the Internet of 2010 is a distant memory…
The Internet of 2010, a care-free childhood where you could go
nearly anywhere and do nearly anything is no more. The unitary
Internet is a memory, replaced by Internet Islands protected by
government-run agencies and closely-allied corporate empires.
By 2020, security concerns have forced all countries to adapt an
Internet “Kill Switch” capability to keep out attacks. Protected by
their own firewalls – and by differing standards and protocols,
politicians take credit for protecting their citizens and economies
against various external and internal threats.
In the name of security, data about online transactions is
carefully tracked by national security agencies in nearly every
nation. Commerce and even communication originating in countries
suspected of being an online threat are blocked from entry
outright, snuffing out a nascent e-commerce boom in fast-growing
Emerging Markets countries and effectively cutting off the
populations of entire nations around the world.
Once the hope for economic growth, the Internet has become just
another way to put up and patrol trade barriers. Walled community
economics increases the frequency of trade wars, and even risks the
development of a new Cold War.
A dispute over the award of the .com IDN in Arabic leads the newly
radicalized government in the region to create its own duplicate
and competing Arabic.com. Local searchers looking for Facebook.com,
for example, are redirected to the Government-sponsored Arabic
version. Additional countries in the region adopt this “intercept
and deflect” approach, leading to massive confusion among Arabic
speaking consumers.
Meanwhile, the combination of “intercept and deflect”, IP and
security issues, and trade barriers lead companies to shelve plans
to expand aggressively into Emerging Markets. More and more
emphasis is placed on share of wallet – pulling the last Dollar,
Yen or Euro out of customers who are safe inside the “walled
garden” of security set up by large firms. Companies need to know
everything about their customers, and privacy – long gone in the
political sphere – is overwhelmed in the commercial sphere as well.
The Internet of things, companies AND Governments know everything
about us.
“Iron Curtains” for information spring up, and with them a series
of “black markets” for information – complete with data smugglers,
the 2020 version of the gun runners and drug smugglers of 2010.
Iran’s Internet becomes the wholly owned province of the state.
High-tech criminals help increasingly desperate consumers and small
businesses find “back doors” into the safe zones as a way to get
into new markets and seek shelter. Sophisticated criminal gangs
demand "protection money" from small and medium sized companies
fearing cyber terrorism.
Finally, the circle is narrowed. Despite the promise of the open
Internet, trade barriers begin closing off markets for goods and
information. 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 to join the “safe zones” mandated
by OECD legislation. 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 island, life goes on, albeit in a more limited way
than before. 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.
Global Government for the Internet
How Governments Rescue the Web
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.
2010
In 2010, Internet governance was still driven by a private sector
that had invested over a trillion dollars to bring connectivity,
content, and e-commerce to nearly 2 billion people worldwide. The
private sector – including businesses and NGOs – were still doing
most of the heavy lifting in setting IT standards, managing the
Internet's domain name system, and allocating IP addresses.
Governments, for their part, eagerly adopted Internet tools and put
law enforcement on the trail of criminals who took their trade
online. Several governments established standards for privacy and
data protection. Most governments shared industry's enthusiasm for
‘cloud computing’ for distributed computing and content management.
As more of the world's information went online, governments
proposed some restrictions on Internet activity and mandated
certain equipment and applications. A few governments went so far
as to impose content filters on Internet choke-points and required
IT operators to censor their own traffic.
While governments pressed for a larger role in Internet governance,
the private sector continued to drive the Internet revolution and
managed technology standards and infrastructure. Governments were
cautious about pressing their hand for greater control, since they
appreciated that private sector innovation and investment were
critical to economic recovery and renewed productivity growth.
Innovation in 2010 was intense in devices such as mobile phones,
pads, and pods. Since the next billion Internet users would come
from the developing world, affordable mobile devices and improved
connectivity promised to accelerate adoption. And since most of the
next billion users don't use the Latin alphabet, the advent of
Internationalized domain names was a welcome innovation, too.
By and large, citizens, businesses, and NGOs seemed satisfied with
the open architecture of the Internet and with the balance of power
in Internet governance in 2010. More governments were participating
side-by-side with the private sector in conferences such as the
Internet Governance Forum. But many governments questioned the
value of a forum that produced no binding agreements, and they
pressed for more inter-governmental oversight.
In hindsight, it should have been obvious that the private sector's
leadership role was being threatened by dark clouds on the
horizon.
Although the Internet was valued for its role in educating
children, many countries had growing anxiety over child online
safety. Concerns about climate change and the collapse of financial
firms stoked demand for more government oversight at a global
level. The environmental and economic disaster caused by the 2010
oil spill in the Gulf of Mexico caused many to question whether
private sector leadership was in the best interests of the public
and of the planet. Nations in the global south harbored doubts
about the northern economies commitment to climate change and
development aid, which only exacerbated tensions over balance of
power in Internet governance.
2011-2015
In the years following 2010, governments around the world began to
acquire unprecedented powers to regulate financial markets, energy
supplies, and just about anything that could be causing global
climate change. These new powers came in small increments and
varied widely among nations, but multi-governmental organizations
took every opportunity to coordinate and consolidate these powers
under mandates for global solutions.
The world's population was anxious for comprehensive solutions to
global problems – and that sentiment found a new target amid
growing concern over the levels of fraud, dangerous conduct, and
threatening content on the Internet.
In 2011, European courts upheld a landmark conviction of business
executives for a video someone had posted to their company's public
website. This led to other convictions and private lawsuits over
liability for user-generated postings and copyrighted material.
Even in the US, courts and Congress questioned the policy of giving
publishers immunity for third party activity, particularly when it
came to endangering minors and violating copyrights. Clearly,
momentum was building to force websites and ISPs to proactively
police user activity and to assume liability for the actions of
users.
By 2012, parents around the world agonized over online risks to
children from sexual predators, bullying and harassment, and
disturbing images of child pornography. Pornography was simply too
easy for kids to find, and home-based filtering tools were no
deterrent to a determined teenager seeking racy websites. By 2012,
the US and several other governments moved to emulate the
nationwide filtering scheme made popular by Australia.
In 2013, a UN conference on communications and spectrum produced a
new international treaty for governmental cooperation on cyber
crime and cyber security. The conference included a protracted
debate about whether to give existing UN agencies formal control
over Internet governance, but stopped short of requiring this in
the new treaty. However, this debate led to high-level
consultations among governments regarding future changes in
Internet governance. Business, NGOs and citizens struggled to
convince governments to maintain the private sector leadership that
had helped the Internet to grow.
In 2014, a mysterious computer virus was secretly lurking in over
100 million computers and mobile devices around the world. On April
1 of that year, the 'Conficker' worm came to life – with a
vengeance. Simultaneously, infected computers phoned home to their
masters in organized crime with credit card data they had been
collecting for years. At the same time, Conficker wiped-clean all
hard drives on host computers and connected devices. Credit card
fraud was rampant for several weeks, while users around the world
struggled to cancel their accounts and restore their computers.
By 2015, it was increasingly clear that consumers and banks were
losing the war against the lucrative criminal enterprise of online
credit card fraud and identity theft. Phishing emails had become
incredibly sophisticated; one particularly effective scam used a
distributed denial-of-service attack to disable a bank website,
then sent bank customers a convincing email directing them to an
alternate website during the outage. Fraudulent websites grew ever
more convincing as criminals found ways to trick browsers into
displaying genuine URLs.
2016-2020:
Consumer fraud was growing exponentially, and the accumulated
losses forced credit card companies and banks to dramatically
increase their fees to process online transactions. Some fees
topped 10% by 2017, cutting deeply into the margins of online
services and retailers. Many startup companies could find no
merchant bank to process their online payments, crippling new
business models that sought to charge for content and services.
By 2018, three trends converged in a 'perfect storm' that brought
profound changes to public attitudes about the role of governments
in regulating online communications and commerce:
First, consumers were rapidly losing confidence and trust in
e-commerce and online banking. Industry self-regulation,
particularly notice and choice regimes, were seen as weak
protections against increasing frequency of database hacks and
security breaches that exposed citizens to fraud and identity
theft. Despite the best efforts of banks and businesses, consumers
felt they could no longer trust the authenticity of emails and
websites.
A second force in this perfect storm arose from the global business
community, facing escalating security costs and crippling losses
from Internet fraud. Moreover, businesses were saddled with huge
lawsuits over privacy, data protection, and incidents involving
user-generated content. Social networking sites had to drastically
shrink their services in the face of legal challenges over content
and privacy. Small startup businesses were particularly hurt since
they could not afford the security systems or marketing campaigns
needed to earn the trust of consumers and payment processors. Even
charitable organizations abandoned online fundraising when it
became too difficult for donors to distinguish between genuine
appeals and scams.
The third element of the perfect storm was a growing awareness that
governments had developed extensive online surveillance and
monitoring tools, and coordinated with other governments to prevent
large-scale terrorist attacks. Even opinion leaders generally
critical of government seemed to revel in thrilling media accounts
of communications intercepts and thwarted attacks on computer
networks and physical targets.
The convergence of these forces brought citizens and businesses to
believe that global governments should take active steps to protect
online services and e-commerce. This message originated from
business-focused think-tanks, and was echoed in public opinion
polls, town hall meetings and Congressional hearings. Legislative
proposals moved swiftly through Congress and survived initial court
challenges over constitutional questions. The US Administration
found that most other governments and inter-governmental
organizations were eager to build on their successful
anti-terrorism cooperation and join forces to defend the Internet
from criminal enterprise and abuse.
Credit card companies and banks rode the wave of public concern to
require biometric authentication for online transactions, driving
adoption of accessories and protocols for computers and mobile
devices. Internet users quickly adopted biometric authentication,
helped by subsidies and incentives from banks, merchants, and
online services.
While these user authentication services were originally designed
to serve online purchasing, they were quickly adopted by online
services looking for ways to reduce exposure to lawsuits and
prosecution for user-generated content. Social networks, blog
sites, and video services soon required authenticated identities
before publishing content – bringing an end to anonymity on the
Internet. Many commercial and public sector websites mandated
authenticated identity access to protect sensitive data. Even
minors were required to obtain government-issued online identity
tokens before using websites catering to kids and teens.
Eventually, government-issued licenses were required for any
provider of online services, and former telecom regulatory agencies
and ministries were in the business of due diligence and issuance
of licenses. Even end-users were required to have ‘Internet
licenses’, granted only after passing an Internet safety exam and
background check. In 2019, the first random ‘sweeps’ of personal
computers were performed by licensed Internet intermediaries, as
required by national law and global treaty.
At many points in the process, there were public protests and legal
challenges from advocates of free expression and groups suspicious
of 'big brother' government surveillance. But the tide of public
opinion and industry enthusiasm carried the day. By 2020,
governments and law enforcement had become deeply embedded in all
aspects of Internet communications, content, and e-commerce.
Users Reign
Social networks and cloud computing have evolved with all the
promise foreseen in 2010. However…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. 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 a new power source
to drive the mobile generation. From the North to countries with
vast reserves of petro resources, climate change and environmental
pressures have continued to grow, and the formerly called
developing countries have establishes strict prohibition rules
against digital dumping, of both physical and ‘soft’ waste.
2010-2011
At the start of the second decade of the new millennium, the global
economy continued to stagger through recession, job loss, and
massive government debt. Slumping national economies strained
international organizations as fractures emerged within a major
trading bloc. Governments were forced to face the stark realities
of spending priorities and investments in social welfare were
challenged for the first time in generations.
As economic forces served to highlight regional and international
differences, issues of global concern continued to demand
international accord. Climate change remained a central focus as
altered weather patterns and brought additional natural disasters
to new parts of the globe, exposing historically safe coastal
regions to the destructive forces of nature.
The spate of natural and environmental disasters which captured the
world’s attention and galvanized relief efforts also revealed the
need for “real-time” communication and on-the-ground assessment of
the disaster landscape. The new phenomenon of social networks
filled the void. Organizations formed immediately in response to
crises to provide assistance and coordination for victims. Reports
from aid workers on the ground were disseminated quickly through
social networks which, with video evidence, revealed the successes
and failures of distribution and allowing organizations to nimbly
navigate roadblocks to aid delivery.
In addition to disaster mitigation, the growth of social networking
changed the way people maintain relationships in their everyday
lives. Those who were adults when the Internet emerged used it to
reconnect with lost friends. The next generation millenials grew up
with social networking, never losing contact with friends and
acquaintances, and maintained large networks of connectivity
throughout their lives. Mashup applications added location
information and video to provide a historical record of social
interaction.
The extensive amount of content and personal data volunteered by
individuals for their online profiles raised privacy concerns. Yet
despite the potential for misuse of this information, and periodic
examples of its abuse, there seemed to be little to dampen the
enthusiasm of users to expose their personal lives to the public or
their ever expanding network of friends.
While privacy and security concerns also existed for cloud
computing, there was little that could discourage the desire of
people to make their content portable. With the rapid improvement
in mobile devices, both in terms of storage and the breadth of
applications, users became more comfortable shifting their work and
personal data to remote storage for ready access at any time and
from any location – further altering the norm for access and
business communication.
2012-2014
By 2014, the widespread adoption of LTE by major wireless carriers
as the new standard for mobile communications produced dramatic
improvements in the broadcast and delivery of content to portable
devices. Vast increases in the speed and volume of data available
to users led to a period of dramatic growth in manufacturing and
application development.
These advances ushered in an era of wireless ubiquity where users
sought remote monitoring and control over increasing elements of
their lives. In an effort to improve energy efficiency and to
provide more control to the user, everyday appliances became smart
machines connected to the network, allowing remote access and
generating data logs.
Social networks made great use of this new information. By
networking appliances and recording usage data, people were able to
track their performance, assess quality, and share these findings
with others pooling information together to create automated
assessments and benchmarks. It also greatly assisted the
troubleshooting process as technical support representatives or
repairmen could perform remote diagnostic tests to address problems
remotely.
Automobiles also integrated wireless connectivity shipping as a
standard feature in most vehicles. This provided location-based
information for traffic monitoring and opened a marketplace for on
demand audio and video entertainment and information resources.
With the added ability to record and transmit video, cars were
equipped with cameras that allowed parents to monitor their
children’s driving behavior. These devices had the added benefit of
serving as accident video recorders, the use of which were
incentivized by insurance companies through lowered premiums.
This wireless connectivity was also linked together with greater
use of sensor technologies to monitor and record the performance
and maintenance and allow for remote diagnostic of existing
problems and to identify trends in performance.
The increased sales of new wireless units, along with rising demand
for hybrid and electric cars, created significant demand for
lithium batteries. Countries of the Andean range possessed the
majority of lithium deposits and reaped the benefits of this
advantage. In response, funding multiplied for energy use
efficiency research, while aggressive recycling programs were
implemented to minimize waste and recover useful materials.
In response to fears of immigrant populations and concerns for
security, biometric identification was made mandatory for
government issued IDs. Faced with this new requirement, users
sought to integrate biometrics into their smart phones since it
provided added security to communications and commerce. Mobile
devices evolved into the principal instrument for both personal
identification and commerce as plastic cards that performed these
tasks become redundant.
Citizen journalism shifted the control of information from major
media conglomerates to gangs of powerful, yet loosely affiliated
information leaders known as "connectors." Without editorial
controls or government oversight, the connectors toppled
governments, and were behind the rise and the fall of many public
figures. Online defamation became common, and those defamed had no
recourse. Freedom of expression for anybody other than the
connectors virtually disappeared.
Users believed that the wellbeing of the majority was more
important than the preservation of copyright laws. Copyright
systems worldwide crumbled under the pervasive violations of
copyright laws by users and the inability of governments to
prosecute the volume of offenses.
2015-2020
2015 saw the major breakthrough many have been waiting for in the
software programming for real-time language translation on the
cloud. With this development, the lives and work of researchers and
educators were dramatically altered as a truly global communication
network was realized that allowed real time information exchange
across geographic, language and cultural barriers.
With this new capability, community elders were drawn into the
online activities as the translation software coupled with the
rapid evolution of the video phone allowed them to share a heritage
with younger generations as never before – no keyboard required!
This development had a tremendous impact on the preservation and
continuation of numerous native languages which were struggling to
find a place and relevance in this modern world.
With users continuing to push the limits of mobile devices on a
global scale with tens of millions of new mobile users in China,
India and Africa, battery technology was seen as roadblock to
further development on the mobile platform.
This issue was answered in 2017 with a significant breakthrough in
solar battery charging technology. New mobile and handheld devices
were sold with a separate device with allowed for a powerful charge
in a reasonable timeframe – never seen before. Users were quick to
recognize this market-altering development and drove another huge
expansion of the mobile device market.
This new battery technology was also hailed by civil society
organizations as a key to bringing reliability and predictability
to regions and countries which had struggled with these limitations
issues in the past.
While the expansion of mobile usage was welcomed – many of historic
challenges remained, namely privacy. But this too was being
addressed in a new manner with software developers recognizing the
fundamental importance of the issue and building in security into
both the devices as well as the software in response to a next
generation of user which demanded more on this front.
Responsible user on the Internet was now being viewed in the same
light as responsible driving was 20 years earlier – as a shared
responsibility that all were expected to contribute to.
Another sign of this new sense of online responsibility was the
development of youth organizations (similar to the Boys and Girls
Scouts) charged with teaching and spreading the message of
responsible usage to new users. Recognizing the value of these
youth organizations, national governments were quick to jump in and
support these initiatives at the grassroots level.
2020-2025
The most dramatic technological development to emerge at the start
of the new decade was the widespread integration of miniaturized
video into the fabric of everyday life. With video recording
equipment becoming progressively smaller, and the ability to
transmit video feeds requiring minimal space, viewwearTM became the
new means to record and broadcast video. Glasses, hats, clothes all
became devices to provide a video record of that satisfied
consumers’ desire for a first person, participatory perspective to
commemorate social interaction.
With seemingly endless storage available in the cloud and
sufficient wireless capacity to send as much data there as needed,
viewwearTM allowed its users to document their lives more
completely than ever before. This was used in varying forms based
on the individual’s preferences and needs.
Using this service, social networking took a new form as people
shared their direct life experiences in episodic form called
life-feeds, broadcast live, or on demand, for subscribers.
Continuing to serve the voyeuristic nature of audiences once
satisfied with reality TV programming and twitter feeds, people
watched and rated the entertainment value of user-generated
productions of real life experiences.
In addition to personal recordings and public broadcasts,
viewwearTM served as a deterrent to physical harm. Since the video
record of any incident or attack could be retrieved from storage
and used as evidence, the service provided a strong disincentive
for assailants. Society accepted the pervasiveness of video
recordings and was willing to sacrifice individual rights to
privacy and freedom from unauthorized recordings as it became
easier to solve crimes and adjudicate legal claims.
As governments faced incredible fiscal difficulties caring for
retired baby boomers, and showed no willingness to make difficult
choices allocating resources, they were forced to use innovative
ways to generate needed revenue. While society was generally
unwilling to embrace law enforcement surveillance of auto and
life-feeds to prosecute victimless crimes, its resistance was not
so great when the penalty was a ticket.
Where citizens once decried the frequency of parking tickets and
the invasiveness of speed cameras, they came to bemoan tickets
incurred for breaking laws they had previously done so with
impunity. Using access to auto feeds, fines for speeding and
violations such as rolling stops came in small increments, but
steadily. Life-feeds yielded fines ranging from jaywalking to
crimes seldom pursued by police in courts such as recreational drug
use.
The fines did little to change behavior, and generated substantial
but not enormous sums, but they reflected the willingness of
society to recognize the authority of law enforcement at a limited
level that users felt did not impinge upon the primacy of the
individual.