ISOC-England: ISOC-E Digest Monday 18 March 2002 Volume 1: Issue 02
"The Internet is for Everyone"
Please note that this is an archive copy and addresses in this posting are out of date. Enquiries: contact (at) isoc-e.org
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The Internet Society of England freely distributable monthly Newsletter
Editor: Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond <editor@gih.com>
Producer: Richard Francis
Please distribute widely !
Instructions for subscribing/unsubscribing are included at the end of this message
***** See last item for further information, disclaimers, caveats, etc. *****
This issue is archived at <http://www.england.isoc.org/newsletter/index.htm>
Contents:
Welcome to issue number 2
News
Feature: The Internet Protocol Journal (IPJ) (Ole Jacobsen)
Feature: ISOC England Member's 60 seconds survey results (Dominic Pinto)
Working Groups
Events Diary
In Next Month's Issue
Abridged info on ISOC England
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Date: Mon, 0 Mar 2002 00:00:00 -0000
From: Olivier MJ Crepin-Leblond <ocl@gih.com>
Subject: Welcome to issue number 2
This is ISOC England's second newsletter. Thank you for
all of the letters of support that we received for the first one.
As time goes on, we are able to use the modest resources
at our disposal to automate tasks and serve our members
better. The newsletter is now archived on the ISOC England
Web site at:
http://www.england.isoc.org/archives
The list is now run on majordomo software.
To subscribe, please send a message to:
majordomo@gih.com
with the command:
subscribe isoc-e-newsletter
in the body of the message
To unsubscribe, send a message to:
majordomo@gih.com
with the command:
unsubscribe isoc-e-newsletter
in the body of the message.
But enough administravia, let's get on with the contents!
The hot subject is that of the new ISOC governance model,
and forthcoming elections for the ISOC Board of Trustees.
The ISOC NEWS section of this newsletter has links to all
of the relevant information.
Next, an apology. In this newsletter, Richard Francis from
iGovernance Consultants in Oxford was to shed some light on
the highly politicised and controversial issue of global Internet
governance. On the day the newsletter was due to be
published, the CEO of The Internet Corporation for Assigned
Names and Numbers (ICANN), Dr Stuart Lynn issued proposals
for root and branch restructuring of ICANN. His conclusion after
a year in post?
ICANN is "losing sight of effectiveness in accomplishing our real mission."
Stuart Lynn's announcement can be found on:
http://www.icann.org/general/lynn-reform-proposal-24feb02.htm
with a pointer to feedback forms (your feedback!) on:
http://www.icann.org/announcements/statement-28feb02.htm
This meant that Richard's article itself needs restructuring too.
His (updated) article will therefore be found in the next ISOC-E
newsletter. The "taster" is included again towards the end of
this newsletter for those that missed it in the first ISOC-E
newsletter.
ICANN may sound like an acronym we do not really relate to,
but ultimately, actions taken by ICANN will affect all of us! They are
responsible for the stable operation of the international root server
system.
I have therefore brought forward an article submitted by
Ole Jacobsen, Editor of the Internet Protocol Journal (IPJ)
that was supposed to appear in the next newsletter.
The Internet Protocol Journal (IPJ) is a quarterly technical journal
published by Cisco Systems. The journal is available as a free paper
subscription and also available via the Web in PDF and HTML format.
It is a "bible" of technical articles, and Ole Jacobsen is a long-
standing Internet Veteran; one of the handful of people that was
there at the very beginning, when the Internet was called
ARPANET and had barely hatched out of its egg. The IPJ,
under the expert editorialship of Ole Jacobsen is definitely a
recognised voice in the Internet's global development.
What do ISOC-E members want out of their membership?
In our second Feature article, Dominic Pinto is able to tell us
about the results of last month's ISOC-E membership
survey. Thanks to all of you that answered the questionnaire,
the ISOC-E board will be able to decide on future events.
Watch this space!
We would really like to receive feedback from everybody,
so if you have suggestions, comments, or would like to
contribute an article to the ISOC-E newsletter, then please
write to: editor@gih.com
Happy Reading!
------------------------------
ISOC NEWS
NEW ISOC GOVERNANCE MODEL (3 March 2002)
ISOC has now published procedures for the new ISOC governance model.
The full text of the procedure can be found on the ISOC England Web site:
http://www.england.isoc.org/isoc-newgov-info.htm
2002 ISOC BOARD OF TRUSTEES ELECTIONS
In accordance with the new ISOC Governance model, those are coming up
soon. An announcement was made by Christian de Larrinaga, explaining the
current position of the Board, and the search for solutions to ensure that
every voice within ISOC England is heard:
http://www.england.isoc.org/isoc-newgov-info.htm
Each Chapter of the Internet Society is encouraged to conduct its own selection
for a suitable candidate to be nominated for the election. The strict interpretation
of the procedures published indicates that the "president" of the chapter has
the authority to propose a candidate for the chapter for the election to the single
seat that chapters around the world are able to elect this year.
Would you like to stand as the nominated candidate for ISOC England ?
Please contact the ISOC England Board, board@england.isoc.org for
consideration. Time is of the essence, as shown by the following calendar:
The election date is Tue May 28.
Announce Election Tue 05-Mar-02
Stop accepting nominations Thu 04-Apr-02
Announce initial slate Fri 12-Apr-02
End accepting petitions Fri 19-Apr-02
Final slate to Elections Comm Sun 21-Apr-02
Mail ballots Sun 28-Apr-02
Election day Tue 28-May-02
Announce results Fri 31-May-02
End receiving challenges Mon 10-Jun-02
Reply to challenges Mon 17-Jun-02
Annual General Meeting Mon 17-Jun-02
For full information on the election process, please consult:
http://www.england.isoc.org/bot-election-chapter.htm
ISOC ENGLAND SUPPORTS ICANN'S AT LARGE INITIATIVE
(31 January 2002)
Christian de Larrinaga's reply to the ICANN announcement
http://www.england.isoc.org/public/ICANN-ALSO-jan2002.htm
FEBRUARY NEWS DIGEST
In the fast-changing world of Technology and the Internet, News are
a daily event. Here is a selection from February's newsreel.
I welcome comments about the selection!
Please e-mail your feedback to editor@gih.com
PRIVACY
YOU CAN SURF, BUT YOU CAN'T HIDE (New York Times - 7 Feb 2002)
Thanks to mobile phones, will Big Brother be keeping an eye on you?
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/07/technology/circuits/07HERE.html
REGULATORY
SPAM CRACKDOWN - FTC SETTLES CHARGES
(ZDNet - 12 Feb 2002)
Federal regulators start their crackdown on spam
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1106-835462.html
US OBJECTS TO EU ONLINE DIGITAL TAX (FT.com - 10 Feb 2002)
The US is wrong to object to European Union plans to levy value
added tax on digital products delivered online, the European Commission
said on Monday.
http://news.ft.com/ft/gx.cgi/ftc?pagename=View&c=Article&cid=FT3LDM58JXC&live=true&tagid=ZZZOMSJK30C&subheading=US
INTERNET GOVERNANCE & E-GOVERNMENT
GETTING REGULAR USERS INVOLVED IN ICANN
ICANN's ex-chair, Esther Dyson's own views about the subject
http://www.edventure.com/conversation/article.cfm?Counter=837907
STATISTICS AND E-GOVERNMENT (Feb 2002)
An extensive report by the OECD Statistical Network
http://www.oecd.org/pdf/M00026000/M00026171.pdf
.COOP INTERNET DOMAIN GOES LIVE
The birth of another Top Level Domain
http://www.coop
ELECTIONS IN THE 21ST CENTURY: FROM PAPER
BALLOT TO E-VOTING
Calling for much greater experimentation with new technologies
before their widespread use of e-voting in elections in the UK.
http://www.electoral-reform.org.uk/sep/publications/books/exec.pdf
ACCESSIBILITY
FOR DEAF SIGNERS, A GLOVE THAT TRANSLATES
(New York Times - 7 February 2002)
Will Technology improve communication for disabled?
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/07/technology/circuits/07GLOV.html?ex=1014099555
PASSWORD CHAOS THREATENS E-COMMERCE
(ZDNet - 15 February 2002)
Can you remember all your passwords ?
http://techupdate.zdnet.com/techupdate/stories/main/0,14179,2847895,00.html
TECHNICAL
W3C BACKS XML-BASED DIGITAL SIGNATURE
The path to more secure Web Services ?
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1106-838335.html
OPEN SOURCE: FROM TECHIE BACKWATER TO
MAINSTREAM SUCCESS (Silicon.com - 5 Feb 2002)
Four years since the term "Open Source" was coined
http://www.silicon.com/a51061
BT CUTS BROADBAND COSTS (Silicon.com - 26 Feb 2002)
BT confirms rumours that had been going around the Internet community
http://www.silicon.com/a51584
BT BROADBAND CUTS PUT BULLDOG ON THE VERGE
The BT broadband price cut will plunge the last surviving independent
local loop operator at the deep end.
http://www.silicon.com/a51653
THE BT HYPERLINK SAGA
"Claiming royalties on a hyperlink is like asking the user of a keyboard to
pay for every keypress" - a Silicon.com reader
http://www.silicon.com/a51209
ECONOMY
STINKING HOLLOW (Economist - 15 Feb 2002)
How Enronitis has hit the Telecom Industry
http://www.economist.com/agenda/displaystory.cfm?story_id=989444
TONGUE IN CHEEK
FROM THE INTERNET, WITH LOVE (BBC News - 14 Feb 2002)
...or how Valentine e-romances can bloom
http://news.bbc.co.uk/hi/english/sci/tech/newsid_1816000/1816497.stm
RUSSIAN MONKS IN SPAM SCANDAL (silicon.com - 4 Feb 2002)
Spam from Russia - a Monastery Opts Out
http://www.silicon.com/a51014
WHAT WAS REALLY BEHIND THE DOTCOM BUST?
(ZDNet - 11 Feb 2002)
Blame gourmet coffee for the dotcom bust
http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1106-833847.html
NOT IN FINLAND ANYMORE? MORE LIKE NOKIALAND
(New York Times - 6 Feb 2002)
After the company town, behold the corporate nation.
http://www.nytimes.com/2002/02/06/international/europe/06NOKI.html?todaysheadlines
BLAIR PLAGUED BY MOBILE PHONE HOAXERS
(Silicon.com - 26 Feb 2002)
"Hi mate, it's Tony, can you call me back?"
http://www.silicon.com/a51587
------------------------------
THE INTERNET PROTOCOL JOURNAL (IPJ)
by Ole Jacobsen, Editor and Publisher
The Internet Protocol Journal (IPJ) is a quarterly technical journal
published by Cisco Systems. The journal is available as a free paper
subscription and also available via the Web in PDF and HTML format.
Background
----------
From 1987 to 1997 I was the Editor and Publisher of ConneXions---The
Interoperability Report, published by Interop Company (now Key3Media).
ConneXions was a monthly journal, but otherwise its purpose and scope
was much similar to IPJ. Interop company was founded on the observation
that a vacuum existed with respect to education about Internet
technologies. The NetWorld+Interop conference and tradeshow continues to
this day with a core focus on education.
IPJ
---
In early 1998 I joined Cisco Systems to produce a new journal which would
cover technical as well as administrative, policy and legal aspects of the
Internet. The primary focus of IPJ has always been a stream of practical
technical articles written by some of the Internet's most respected experts.
While the journal is published by Cisco, it does not promote or otherwise
cover Cisco's products or solutions, nor for that matter those of any other
vendor. This is probably the main reason for IPJ's success. The journal is
seen as a neutral forum for discussion of networking issues. Most, but not
all, of the articles are tutorial in nature ("What is MPLS?"), others may
raise more questions than they answer ("What changes are need to BGP to
allow it to cope with Internet growth?). In addition to feature-length
articles, IPJ also carries book reviews, letters to the editor, and
announcements of various kinds.
Subject Matters
---------------
There are too many "hot topics" to mention, but we have covered:
- MPLS
- BGP Routing issues
- Virtual Private Networks
- IPv6
- SSL
- IPSec
- Web caching
- Middleware
- Internet Registries
- ICANN
- QoS
- Mobile IP
- Gigabit Ether
- Peering and Settlements
- Multicast
Marketing IPJ
-------------
IPJ has only one official marketing vehicle: The Web. From the main
cisco.com Web page you will find information about IPJ and other Cisco
publications. Subscription are strictly "opt-in", we have never sent IPJ to
any customer list or provided it to readers without them first asking for
it. Yet, to date IPJ's subscription base has grown to over 21,000 and the
rate of new subscriptions does not show any signs or slowing down. Some
60% of our readers live outside of the United States, the second largest
subscriber base is in India. We have two subscribers in Katmandu, Nepal
and a handful in Iceland. Most countries in the world are represented in
our subscriber list.
Copies of IPJ are occasionally provided for "pick up" at major Internet
events such as INET, APRICOT or IETF meetings. It is our goal to establish
a dialog with our readers and create a sense of community. We receive a lot
of positive feedback from our readers, and many requests for address
updates -- a sign that people want to continue to receive the journal.
More about IPJ
--------------
You can find more information about IPJ by visiting
http://www.cisco.com/ipj
About the author
----------------
Ole J. Jacobsen, the Editor and Publisher of IPJ, has been active in the
computer networking field since 1976 when he went to work for the Norwegian
Defence Research Establishment, an early ARPANET site. Ole was with Interop
Company (now Key3Media) since shortly after its formation in 1987 until
1998. He was the Editor Publisher of ConneXions--The Interoperability
Report, a monthly technical journal in the field of computer-
communications, published by Interop Company. Jacobsen holds a B.Sc. in
Electrical Engineering and Computing Science from the University of
Newcastle upon Tyne, England. He serves on several international program
committees for networking events such as INET (http://isoc.org), APRICOT
(http://www.apricot.net) and NetWorld+Interop (http://www.interop.com). Ole
is a member of ACM (http://www.acm.org), The American Guild of Organists
(http://www.agohq.org) and The House Rabbit Society
(http://www.rabbit.org). He can be reached at ole@cisco.com
------------------------------
WHERE DO WE WANT TO GO TODAY?
(with apologies to Bill Gates)
a.k.a ISOC England Member's 60 seconds survey results
By Dominic Pinto
Early returns on last month's member survey confirm that our
members have a wide range of interests and priorities. At this
point, I would like to thank all those who participated, even
though the results presented below are based on a handful of responses.
Developing a coherent sense of these, and fitting them in to
a practical framework will, I predict, pose challenges to the Chapter.
But none are 'un-doable', and must inform the Chapter program
of work. And don't forget, the Internet is quintessentially a bottoms-up,
and user-led, initiated, and driven environment. If there's something
there you want to do, networking to find like-minded people, and
'doing it' is where we are at!
Briefly, then I'll review the survey (and anyone is, by the way, free
and warmly encouraged to complete this - only 60 seconds,
honest - at any time and mail back to me),
I've averaged the rankings, and left comments in, plus people's
expressed additional preferences.
Rather than reach a direct conclusion - what do other members think?
How do you react? Are you opposed, for, or want something different?
What will the Board do?
Olivier will just love the priority given to having a newsletter!!
So - not just where do you want to go to today, but what do YOU think?
Go on, have your say....
All respondents so far are both ISOC and ISOC-E members, save one.
A. to meet fellow members in my locality regularly - once a
month/every three months/every six months (specify which of these
apply) to find out what we are all doing
Average 5.4 out of a maximum of 10
4 months
B. to meet with other users - in business, public sectors - in
my locality and across the net, to find out what people are using the
net for (profitably, to individual satisfaction, to organize, to manage
work, to find telework, to be on the inside track to find work)
Average 4.8
C. for channels to contacts and connections, to showcase and
promote business, similar ideas, views, philosophies, both directly and
via the Web.
Average 5.6
D. for knowledge development and training opportunities.
Average 5.8
E. for regular newsletters, with information on, insight into, the
internet - at a number of levels - technical, business, public policy,
international policy, commercial and so on.
Average 8.2 with a focus on Internet governance (including self-governance)
F. for information - access to cheap, good, solid, explanatory
seminars, workshops, and conferences, that really inform.
Average 6.2 (overloaded but I have learned of at least one good event that
I did not hear about elsewhere)
G. Associating and linking - for networking, promotion of meetings,
bringing known and attractive speakers and issues to audiences that might
otherwise not be aware of the opportunity to hear/question/debate
these.
Average 5.8
H. To associate with like-minded organisations (national and international -
e.g. the RSA, IEE, IEEE Communications Society, IBTE, FITCE), to promote
use of the net, share their meetings, etc.
Average 5.2 (but not to duplicate effort)
I. To debate and develop public policy in areas that interest me
(e.g. higher education, science, etc.)
Average 5 - Internet is proving to be a rotten medium for serious policy debate
J. As a means and channel for contributing to and influencing gov't and
public policy.
Average 6.4 but only if ISOC can develop structures which represent
coherent sets of the Internet communities (plural)
K. (any suggestions/comments)
'To develop coherent sets of communities, including of different
types of Internet users to help "educate" suppliers (forcibly if necessary)
into providing the products and services that their customers will pay for.
The Internet needs healthy commercial competition and revenues to flourish.
The current polarisation between a zero billion dollar content industry,
a handful of would-be infrastructure monopolists and bunch of wishful
thinkers will not survive the high tech recession.'
'My main concern is promoting simplicity.'
'Simple software and simple interfaces.'
'Conference type systems of information exchange with minimal graphics.'
'If I'm in any way representative of my age group (>65) there are many
thousands with computers who spend minimal time on the WWW.'
'I recognise the value of the WWW but I hate Windoze, and I hate
Many of the smart-ass site developers ideas of attractive usage!'
Dominic Pinto, Senior Associate, Telesphere
(http://www.telespherelimited.com)
Has worked as a policy strategist and senior consultant in the global
communications industry for over 18 years - specializing in corporate
and business strategies, service development and applications, including
e-commerce, business development, science policy, public and
international policy, and regulation.
He is an active participant in the International Telecommunications
Society (http://www.itsworld.org), IEEE Communications Society
(http://www.comsoc.org/), FITCE (http://www.fitce.org), IBTE
(http://www.ibte.org), Royal Institution (http://www.ri.ac.uk), the Royal
Society of Arts (http://www.rsa.org.uk) and has been an active member of
ISOC for seven years. He is a founder member of ISOC-E, and the
Founder Chairman of ISOC-E's Internet Access Working Group.
He can be reached at dominic.pinto@ieee.org
------------------------------
WORKING GROUPS
These are still in the process of being formed. More information soon.
------------------------------
EVENTS DIARY
ICANN MEETINGS IN ACCRA, GHANA
10 - 14 March 2002
http://www.icann.org/accra/
INET 2002, WASHINGTON DC, USA
18 - 21 June 2002
"Internet Crossroads: Where Technology and Policy Intersect"
Book NOW to attend the Internet's yearly Global conference
whose main themes this year are about:
Technology, Uses of Internet, Governance, Legislation & Regulation
http://www.inet2002.org/
For a full schedule of future meetings and events, please consult:
http://www.england.isoc.org/event/index.htm
------------------------------
IN NEXT MONTH'S ISSUE
"Governance of the Internet at the Crossroads", Richard Francis'
long awaited article, will provide us with all the latest about
Global Internet Governance. This will include all recent developments
hot off the press:
"The 1994 Bangemann Report to the EC identified information and
communication technologies as generating a new industrial revolution,
leading Europe into the information society age.
In 2002 have these new technologies yet established the foundations
of a new international legal and regulatory architecture? Law and
regulations for the Internet exist in Europe. Will the instruments used
to establish future regulations be found in European directives and
legislation enacted by national assemblies, or new Internet industry
codes of conduct?"
------------------------------
Date: 01 Jan 2002 (LAST-MODIFIED)
From: editor@gih.com
Subject: Abridged info on ISOC England
ISOC England is a full chapter of the Internet Society in the UK.
ISOC England is a voice of the future, creates awareness and
promotes the Internet in the UK as a centre for business, government
and cultural activities by working in partnership with many of the
leading institutions, in government, academia, society and business.
Our mission statement is:
To assure the beneficial, open evolution of the global Internet and its
related internetworking technologies and applications through leadership
in standards, issues and education in England.
For more information about ISOC England, turn to:
http://www.england.isoc.org/about.htm
CONTRIBUTIONS: letters to the editors, suggestions etc. should be
sent to editor@gih.com with a clear subject line. We reserve
the right to amend and publish any letter sent to this address.
ISOC England does not necessarily endorse the views contained in this
newsletter which are the responsibility of their original poster. All
contributions are considered as personal comments.
Usual disclaimers apply.
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Copyright (C) 2002 The Internet Society of England
The ISOC England Newsletter is a free newsletter distributed to members
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granted to anybody, provided this copyright notice is included.
------------------------------
End of ISOC-E Digest 1.02
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