Techjaja

Internet Society launches first ever toolkit that stops politicians from breaking the Internet – Techjaja

by

- Advertisement -

The Internet Society a global non-profit organization dedicated to an open, globally-connected, secure, and trustworthy Internet for everyone – will be launching the most robust tool to date to stop policymakers from breaking the Internet on Wednesday 9th September.

With the news of the Belarusian dictatorship reportedly cutting off civilian access to parts of the Internet due to protests over a disputed election, to the Trump administration introducing the ‘Clean Networks program’ to thwart the penetration of Chinese power in US online sphere and banning Chinese apps, TikTok and WeChat, a raft of proposals to control the Internet has left it at increasing risk of becoming the “Splinternet”. Attacks on the Internet are growing every day, threatening the global and open Internet from reaching its full potential and all the benefits it brings.

ALSO READ: ICANN, ISoc urge Ugandans to embrace the good in the Internet

- Advertisement -

The Internet Society wants to protect the Internet’s unique architecture by educating policymakers and creating a benchmark for them to adhere to. This will help ensure that future legislation will not only protect the public interest but also the Internet’s collaborative, resilient and open architecture.

Up until this point, there has been no tool to assess how proposed regulation and technology trends affect the Internet’s architecture. The Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit is based on the newly-published paper, Internet Way of Networking (IWN): Defining the Critical Properties of the Internet, that explains how the Internet’s unique foundation is responsible for its strength and success. It also identifies the critical properties that must be protected to enable the Internet to reach its full potential.

- Advertisement -

The Internet Impact Assessment Toolkit is a guide to help ensure regulation, technology trends, and decisions don’t harm the infrastructure of the Internet. It describes the Internet at its optimal state – a network of networks that is universally accessible, decentralized, and open; facilitating the free and efficient flow of knowledge, ideas, and information.

The five critical properties identified by the IWN are:

- Advertisement -