What will 2023 bring for digital geopolitics, AI, data, and cryptocurrencies?
Will the ‘1998 deal’ on digital government still hold?
What digital issues will dominate the United Nations and multilateral agenda in Geneva, and beyond?
All these, and numerous other questions that will shape the digital landscape in 2023 will be discussed online on Thursday, 12 January 2023 at 13.00 UTC (14.00 CET).
Join Jovan Kurbalija and his guests and contribute to the foresight discussion!
12 digital governance and diplomacy trends of 2023
In 2023, we will revisit the “1998 deals”, which laid the foundation for current Internet/digital governance. After 25 years, we can see which governance arrangements have stood the test of time and which need to be altered to reflect the Internet’s evolution from 147 million Internet users (3.6% of the world’s population) in 1998 to 5.473 million Internet users (69% of the world’s population) in January 2023.
In the digital governance timeline, 2025 is the next important year in the digital governance timeline when the WSIS arrangement will be revisited and UN PoA in the wider context of using digital tools for the ‘mile’ for the realisation of the Agenda 2030 and 17 SDGs. An important stop on the way to 2025 will be the adoption of the Global Digital Compact during the UN Summit of the Future, to be held in 2024.
In 2023 predictions, you can read on digital geopolitics, vulnerability of submarine cables, next steps in digital cooperation, challenges for data governance, cybersecurity and much more.
2023 marks a quarter of a century since much of today’s digital governance structure was set. The ‘1998 internet governance architecture was developed in a few months: in September, Google and ICANN were established; discussions under the UN ‘information security’ track that led to UN GGE and OEWG were initiated; the WTO placed itself a player in the discussions of economic aspects related to the digital economy, notably with the adoption of the moratorium on customs duties on electronic transmissions. In November, ITU Plenipotentiary conference in Minneapolis decided to host the World Summit on Information Society, initiating a process of digital policy discussions which is active today with the work of the IGF and WSIS Forum.
Currently, there is growing pressure to reform this architecture by creating mechanisms to make decisions and recommendations on digital policy issues (potentially through a strengthened IGF), by creating holistic mechanisms of global data governance, by preserving and advancing the shift towards more inclusive cybersecurity discussions, and by avoiding fragmentation trends in the digital economy, currently being brewed by disparate national laws, or by trade agreements which do not include a large number of developing countries and LDCs.
Why is it easy to predict digital governance?
The last 12 annual predictions show that digital governance has changed much slower than digital technology. With the exception of a few major policy earthquakes, such as the Snowden revelation and the digital dimensions of the Ukraine war, most other changes were rather slow and predictable.
Following 10 years of providing predictions (link), we notice that digital governance has been changing much slower than digital technology. Thus, it was rather easy to predict future developments. On the one hand, tech companies have been effectively lobbying for the status quo and as little regulation as possible. On the other hand, for a long time, governments were timid as any attempt to regulate the tech sector, including reasonable ones, was often bashed.
These two dynamics are likely to change. For tech companies, regulation can create a more predictable business environment, especially on the global level, where fragmented regulations increase compliance complexity. In parallel, governments – especially during the pandemic – have been less ‘shy’ in digital governance. As digital permeated every segment of real-world and stakes became higher, they started doing what they should: protecting the public interest and internet of citizens in the digital realm. It is happening intensively in Brussels, Beijing, Washington and many capitals worldwide. Thus, for the first time in decades, we can expect an acceleration of digital governance in 2023 and the following years.
2023 won’t start with the ‘next big thing’ in the tech sector. Last year in January, it was Web 3.0, which during the year lost momentum with the slow take-off of the metaverse and crypto crisis. Only AI kept steady momentum out of 3 leading Web 3.0 technologies.
Quantum computing, one long-term technology, will likely enter in ‘quantum winter’ with less investment enthusiasm.
As tech development slows done in 2023, it will be the right moment to discuss digital governance and our overall digital future.
2022 started with a big promise of Web 3.0, combining metaverse, blockchain, and AI in a decentralised network. Enthusiasm for a new type of web started losing momentum towards the end of the year.
Metaverseis not taking off as envisaged by Meta company, formerly Facebook, which centred its future business model around Metaverse. An initial monthly target of 500.00 active users on Horizon Worlds – Meta’s metaverse platform – was reduced to 280.000 new users. Currently, there are fewer than 200,000. Out of all socialising, play, and workspaces on Horizon, only 9% have more than 50 visitors, while some of them have never visited.
Slow take off of metaverse is a temporary slow down. Metaverse or virtual/extended/augmented reality is here to stay. In addition to Meta, Microsoft, Apple, and Google are investing heavily in metaverse applications and tools. A new generation of users with gaming experience will dominate the internet population in the coming years. Thus, 2023 will be the year of background developments and regrouping ahead of future growth in this field.
Linkage: Digital identity, Metaverse standardisation
Blockchain lost momentum with a negative spillover from the recent cryptocurrency market. How the technical capabilities of blockchain technology can be abused to achieve the exact opposite of the proclaimed benefits is vividly demonstrated by the demise of FXB and the subsequent collapse of bitcoin. FXB harmed bitcoin’s credibility.
Blockchain technology’s potential for decentralisation can be easily transformed into centralised control by those who control access to blockchain platforms and systems.
Blockchain enthusiasts often list the following use cases: a supply chains, financial transactions, verifying identities, electronic medical records, conducting elections, and real estate transactions. Blockchain technology has technical promise. Whether or not these possibilities materialise in 2023 is still up in the air.
AI is gaining maturity both in the realisation of AI potentials and governance. At the end of 2022, ChatGPT attracted a lot of attention with new possibilities for generating texts and images. In this spirit, in 2023, AI will have to move towards productive use (see Gartner hype cycle). Crossing this bridge for AI will require less technology and more organisational and management changes for optimal interaction between humans and machines.
Metaverse and blockchain will lower in visibility. Quantum computing, one long-term technology, will likely enter in ‘quantum winter’ with less investment enthusiasm. As the tech sector will take one step backwards, it will be the right moment to discuss digital governance ad our overall digital future.
Quantum computing has raised a lot of interest, but all promises are far from being realised. ‘Quantum winter is coming’ according to Sabine Hossenfeider, who said: ‘This buble of inflated promises and eventually burst. It’s just a matter of time.’
2. Digital geopolitics: from submarine cables to semiconductors and free flow of data
The underlying question is if geopolitical tensions will accelerate internet fragmentation in 2023. The China-USA digital rivalry will certainly continue. The main question is at what level of internet fragmentation will accelerate from submarine cables to tech platforms. Many countries will have to navigate the interplay between digital interdependence and sovereignty. Some new developments may strengthen internet infrastructures, such as IBSA Digital momentum and UN digital cooperation.
There are no signals of easing digital geopolitical tensions in 2023, especially between the USA and China. As the Economist argues, ‘The tech war between America and China is just getting started’. The main test in relations between the USA and China will be the status of TikTok in the USA.
In the worst scenario, these tensions could trigger the fragmentation of the internet. In the most likely scenario, it will be a series of small tensions that will deteriorate digital flows. The Ukraine war will increase divides further.
Sovereignty will remain high on the agenda in 2023, framed in different ways as digital, data, AI, or cyber sovereignty. The push for digital sovereignty will be motivated by governments’ drive to have legal jurisdiction over digital activities on their territory and to reduce negative spillovers from integrated digital networks.
However, full sovereignty will be much more difficult to achieve in the digital realm due to the internet’s networked nature and the tech companies’ power.
Approaches to digital sovereignty will vary, depending on a country’s political and legal systems. Legal approaches include national regulation and court judgements, while technical ones can vary between data filtering and total internet shutdowns.
The term sovereignty will also be used more often in the context of digital self-determination of citizens and communities, mainly related to control over data and future AI developments.
Digital interdependence will continue to be tested in 2023. It is supported by a strong drive of citizens, companies, and countries to be connected across national borders. Digital interdependence can even survive wars. During the Ukraine war, many interdependencies between the two countries were cut. However, it is still possible to exchange messages between Russia and Ukraine via the internet.
still can exchange messages via the internet. due to can be witnessed in very practical and tangible ways, from families communicating across continents via instant messaging and voice-over-IP (VOIP) services such as WhatsApp and Viber to using Amazon and Alibaba for online trade and shopping.
Protection of submarine cables, the semiconductors industry, and data flows will play an important role in digital geopolitics in 2023.
Submarine cables are the most vulnerable part of global digital infrastructure. A major disruption of internet cables, as happened in the past, could cut countries from the internet. As happened with the North Stream gas pipeline, more than XXX submarine cables on the ocean seabed can be easily disrupted. While possibilities for physical support are limited by sophisticated new generations of submarines operated by naval powers, there is surprisingly little legal protection for this critical infrastructure of modern society. Satellites, which may offer some comfort but can’t replace fibre in its role as a global backbone, have also been shown to be susceptible to geopolitics (from the hacking of ViaSat to Musk’s caprice).
Semiconductors are at the centre of the geopolitical battle between the USA and China. The process of reducing China’s access to cutting-edge microchips and technology for their production started with President Trump and continued with the Biden presidency. China will require years to grasp technology for the production of the sophisticated microprocessor of a new generation. These geopolitical tensions will have a few side impacts. First, Taiwan, with its TSMC as the main manufacturer of microchips, is in the centre of the China-US tension. Second, the USA, Europe, and India started ‘reshoring’ of semiconductors industry on their territory in order to avoid future vulnerabilities, especially in the case of the Taiwan war or economic blockade. The USA will invest 280 billion dollars in domestic research and production, both through boosting Intel’s capabilities and setting up TSMC factories; Europe’s Chips Act looks at mobilising close to 50 billion Eur in public and private investments in production, research and innovation. You can consult more on geopolitics and semiconductors.
Data flows will shape emerging geopolitics. An overall trend is that countries will try to preserve more and more data on their territory, especially critical data such as health records and digital identities of citizens. Many countries will have to strike a trade off between data sovereignty and integration in the global economy. The more data they keep nationally, the less they can benefit from the international digital economy and growth. Free flow of data will be essential for a small and export-oriented economy. Data sharing will be critical for dealing with global issues such as climate change. At the same time, locally collected and processed data can enable innovations related to AI and open data services on national or regional levels, possibly eating into the revenue cake of some big tech. Dive deeper: Data governance
Position of the main actors
In 2023, geopolitical tensions between China and the United States will continue following the trend of the previous few years. The main tensions will be on China’s access to semiconductors technology and telecommunications infrastructure for 5G, where Huwaie still has leadership but is being challenged by the open 5G architectures known as OpenRAN. A new crisis could be triggered by the status of the Tik-Tok platform, owned by a Chinese company, which gained much popularity worldwide.
The Indian presidency of the G20 presidency could mark IBSA Digital Momentum, which can spread over 3 years during subsequent G20 chairmanships. of India (2023), Brazil (2024) and South Africa (2025). India will also chair SCO Summit in 2023
Digital cooperation has a chance for a new start with negotiations of the UN Digital Compact, a new leadership of ITU, and Geneva dynamics.
Sweden and Rwanda will be an interesting bridge between global and regional negotiations. In addition to being co-facilitators of the UN GA process on Digital Compact, the two countries have a prominent regional role. Sweden will chair the Council of the EU for the year’s first half. Rwanda is involved in most digital initiatives at the African continent.
In 2023, new dynamism is expected in Africa with major digital actors strengthening or initiating new initiatives and projects.
3. Start of IBSA Digital momentum around development, democracy, diplomacy
India, Brazil, and South Africa (IBSA) are democracies and developing economies with a vibrant digital scene. They are strong supporters of multilateral and multistakeholder approaches with many examples of inclusion in the digital governance of the tech community, academia, the private sector, civil society, local communities, and other actors. Can India, Brazil and South Africa foster new digital governance dynamism around their shared 3d priorities: development, democracy, and diplomacy?
In 2023, India will start chairing G20, followed by Brasil (2024) and South Africa (2025). The three countries – which collaborate via the IBSA Forum – are likely to play a prominent role in the process of reforming digital governance.
Three keywords – development, democracy, diplomacy – can shape IBSA Digital Momentum. India, Brazil, and South Africa are developing economies from the Global South with functional democracies and support for mulilateral diplomacy.
Development
Digitalisation is the engine of growth in IBSA economies. India is a leader with vibrant outsourcing and digital economy.
IBSA countries use digitalisation to address development problems. They have major digital divides in countries. They also embrace future issues such as daata governance
The three countries also face major societal tension exacerbated by digitalisation, including the digital divide, inequalities, and the need to have digital governance that will reflect local cultural, political and economic specificities. In IBSA countries, future digital growth will happen due to the big and young populations and economic dynamics.
On digital inclusion, three countries have been involved in ‘cable inclusion’ (technical infrastructure) towards holistic inclusion of ensuring that their societies can benefit from the Internet by making it affordable to citizens to digital skills and governance framework. For example, Aadhar is seen by many as a successful digital identity initiative, inspiring similar systems in other countries. South Africa has been a leader in the inclusion of women and youth. Brasil focuses a lot on other marginalised groups from people with disabilities to indigenous people.
On data, IBSA embraces the free flow of data as the basic principle. For India, with a strong ICT sector, it is a vital economic principle. However, all three countries argue for data sovereignty over critical data for governments and citizens. With a big population, they also see data as their national resource. It is precisely in this nexus between the free flow of data and data sovereignty that the next data governance deal will be made.
Democracy
India, Brazil, and South Africa are functional democracies with regular elections and a vibrant civil society scene. In India, civil society action with 1 million signatures preserved net neutrality and stopped Facebook’s ‘Free Basic’ project. Brazil has pioneered a unique national multistakeholder model around the Internet Governance Steering Committee (CGI.br). India hosted one of the biggest initiatives. South Africa made major successes in youth and female inclusion in digital processes on a national level.
IBSA countries also have to deal with digital aspects of societal and political problems. India had the most Internet shutdowns in 2022 according to XYZ. Brazil has witnessed major misuse of social media platforms in elections. South Africa experiences most online women violence.
South Africa has been one of the critical actors since WSIS 2005. India and Brazil hosted the Internet Governance Forum. Both countries strongly support policy inclusion of academia, civil society, business and other significant actors. Brazil hosted the 2014 NetMunidal meeting, a unique experiment in multistakeholder decision shaping. India’s civil society staged one of the most prominent citizens’ protests on net neutrality when one million citizens petitioned to stop tech companies from providing limited internet access to unserved regions.
Diplomacy
India, Brazil, and South Africa are supporters of multilateral diplomacy. They have coalition and conveying capacity as they are members of various international coalitions, processes, and organisations. They can also bring wider regional and global partnerships by involving countries sharing similar digital strengths and dilemmas. Many countries share IBSA strengths and challenges, such as Indonesia and Singapore in Asia, Mexico and Argentina in Latin America, and Nigeria, Kenya, and Rwanda in Africa. IBSA dynamism could resonate well with many digital priorities of EU, Switzerland, Turkey, Canada, New Zealand, and Australia, which are, for example, looking to enhance digital autonomy, promote a more fair division of benefits of the data economy and encourage the creation of data infrastructures.
We are wrapping up our anniversary year, which has been full of breakthroughs and achievements. With a record number of courses and students, groundbreaking research and publications, and a new generation of AI-driven apps, we have contributed to the digital transformation of diplomacy and governance worldwide.
We celebrated our achievements with two anniversary events in Geneva and Malta.
Our Diplo Week in Geneva (7-11 November) brought together diplomats, academics, and tech professionals in a series of interactive workshops on AI, data, humanitarian diplomacy, the Geneva Digital Atlas, and African digital diplomacy.
The Summit on Digital Diplomacy and Governance in Malta (17-19 November) was a landmark event attended by 220 in situ and 290 online participants, including heads of state, ministers, diplomats, tech professionals, and students.
Thank you for being with us during this special year!
We wish you a prosperous, healthy, and happy New Year!
Digital policy developments that made global headlines
The digital policy landscape changes daily, so here are all the main developments from November. There’s more detail in each update on the Digital Watch Observatory.
Global digital architecture
The G20 Bali Leaders’ Declaration pledged to advance digital transformation, the development of digital skills and digital literacy, digitalisation for the economy, and access to digital technologies.
The 17th Internet Governance Forum (IGF) was held in Addis Ababa from 28 November to 2 November 2022. Read our reflections on page 4.
The third meeting of the EU-US Trade and Technology Council (TTC) resulted in agreement on an early warning system for semiconductor shortages, as well as pledging cooperation on emerging technologies, using digitalisation to ease transatlantic trade, and fostering digital skills.
Sustainable development
China pledged to use big data, biotech, and AI to resolve environmental problems including pollution, climate change, and the destruction of ecosystems.
For many internet and digital enthusiasts, the annual Internet Governance Forum (IGF) is the highlight of the year. With a total of 5,210 participants in situ and online, IGF 2022 (held in Addis Ababa from 28 November to 2 December 2022) was indeed one of the main events this year. But since numbers tell only half the story, here’s why we think IGF 2022 made the top list.
The compact was indeed the ‘new kid on the block’, not least since the IGF discussions will feed into it as part of the ongoing open consultations facilitated by the UN Secretary-General’s Envoy on Technology.
In topics that repeatedly resonated across sessions, some discussions showed strong signs of maturity. Data governance discussions moved from the generic notion of ‘data’ to specificities of personal, corporate, and public data, and how these require dedicated governance solutions.
Meaningful connectivity goes beyond cables and satellites and requires addressing the digital skills divide and inclusive measures that embrace women and girls, the elderly, and people with disabilities. Privacy and security, often pitted against each other, are strongly considered a false dichotomy. Many of these discussions articulated a thriving development agenda.
As for issues that render the online space unsafe, experts repeated a few harsh warnings: Gender-based violence is particularly worrisome, in some regions experiencing a surge; child sexual abuse material circulating online is increasing; the protection of human rights is eroding, particularly among the younger generation of internet users.
And yet, although discussions were plentiful, IGF 2022 saw little in terms of new solutions and dynamics – except for the discussions on the Declaration for the Future of the Internet (which drew a fair share of criticism over the lack of consultation in the lead-up to its current format) and the vivid debates between parliamentarians during their dedicated track.
The process
The most noteworthy development in IGF 2022’s process was the active participation of members of parliament. This is a direct result of the IGF’s outreach, which aimed at engaging parliamentarians more effectively in the IGF discussions.
As a result, this track has gone from strength to strength since its first major attempt in 2019, with parliamentarians from developing countries contributing quite significantly this year.
Three strong calls reverberated throughout the discussions:
Parliaments should contribute to strengthening national multistakeholder dialogues on internet and digital policy issues and ensuring that national interests and priorities are reflected in international processes.
More efforts are needed to strengthen the capacity of parliamentarians to work on digital policy issues, including through training and skills building. This will help ensure that they engage in meaningful debates before passing legislation affecting the digital space.
Parliaments should have their own seat at the table in regional and global processes dealing with digital issues.
Other tracks at IGF 2022 included those dedicated to high-level leaders, youth, and intersessional work.
The format
Held in Addis Ababa and online, IGF 2022 was empowered by the dynamism of the African digital community. The event hosted 5,210 participants in situ and online, participating in over 300 sessions.
The hybrid format is maturing at the IGF, building on the forum’s long tradition of remote participation since IGF 2007 in Brazil, with a strong impetus from Diplo’s Remote Participation Working Group. The IGF can become a hybrid meeting lab if it addresses some relatively well-known issues. These include: reducing the occurrence of tech glitches, enabling more straightforward, user-friendly navigation of the forum site, and providing more training in hybrid meeting techniques for session moderators.
For the 8th consecutive year, the Geneva Internet Platform Digital Watch Observatory provided just-in-time reporting from IGF 2022. Explore Diplo’s IGF reporting approach in three layers, starting with the first layer – the IGF 2022 Summary Report.
You can then navigate to the second layer, consisting of summaries of sessions and data analyses of the corpus text of IGF 2022.
On the third layer, you will find detailed information on topics from AI to cybersecurity, as well as main actors from the UN, the private sector, academia, and civil society.
This holistic reporting provides comprehensive coverage of the key topics, actors, and trends during and beyond IGF 2022 as a single event.
November’s Summit on Digital Diplomacy and Governance took stock of recent developments in digital governance and reflected on how we should navigate our digital future. Although the digital world evolves at incredible speed, much of what was discussed will remain significant for a long time. Here are some of the main takeaways from the summit.
Digital is everywhere
What was once a discussion about the internet and the technology behind it has now expanded to include almost every facet of everyday life. It’s not only about cables anymore. The internet impacts our social lives, our health, our economies, and the environment. The benefits of digital technology are indisputable and pervasive. Facebook, Twitter, and TikTok own our very souls.
But as with other global commons, the digital commons is falling prey to the tragedy of the commons. The online space is rife with misuse, risks, security issues, data breaches, and cyberweapons. The costs can quickly outweigh the benefits.
The UN Secretary-General’s Global Digital Compact initiative – including an open consultation during the summit – will outline shared principles for an open, free and secure digital future for all.
Enter digital foreign policy
From the initial days of the availability of the internet, it was clear that diplomacy would be greatly impacted by this advance in communications. The internet and technology would introduce new topics to diplomatic agendas; they would shape the environment in which diplomacy is conducted; and they would change the essence of how diplomacy is practised. (This three-track methodology sums up Diplo’s approach to digital diplomacy and was the underlying framework for the summit’s thematic discussions.)
Digital has also entered foreign policy – in some cases, through a dedicated digital foreign policy.
A vital role for digital diplomats
As key stakeholders, governments should act confidently in protecting the interests of their citizens, communities, and companies in the digital realm, and act cautiously in using their power to control the digital realm. Diplomats, and especially digital diplomats – a new breed of diplomatic officials – can help achieve this delicate balance.
Diplomats will therefore need to acquire new skills in digital governance: An understanding of the new geopolitics and geo-economic landscape, knowledge of the technology fuelling these developments, and the skills to engage with other actors, including tech companies, academia, and civil society.
Strengthening weaker voices
The voices of small and developing countries are quite weak in digital negotiations – more so as the rest of the world jumps on the bandwagon of AI and other frontier technologies. This can change through sustainable institutional capacity building and acquiring the specific digital skills needed to overcome financial and institutional limitations to actively participate in global negotiations.
Participants at the Malta Summit listening to an address by Malta’s Prime Minister
The summit was organised by Diplo, operator of the Geneva Internet Platform, in cooperation with its founding partners, the Governments of Malta and Switzerland.
Numerous policy discussions take place in Geneva every month. The following updates cover the main events in November. For event reports, visit the Past Events section on the GIP Digital Watch Observatory.
Geneva Peace Week 2022 | 31 October – 4 November
The 2022 Geneva Peace Week (GPW), titled ‘Peace is Possible’, took place at the Maison de la Paix during the first week of November. As the annual flagship event of the Geneva Peacebuilding Platform, the GPW leads trending discussions among the international peacebuilding community in Geneva and their overseas partners to promote sharing knowledge and best practices. The 2022 edition offered four main thematic tracks to guide conversations, one of which focused on digital peace. From the new challenges that the emergence of social media platforms poses in the field of mediation to the various digital tools that could be used to monitor, surveil, and predict civilian behaviours in turbulent times, policymakers and peace practitioners convened to share lessons learned on the ground and discussed proposals for the way forward. Multimedia coverage of the event by the Digital Series.
Towards a digital emblem? Benefits, risks and possible solutions | 3 November
The Partner2Connect Digital Coalition (P2C) is a multistakeholder alliance to mobilise resources, partnerships, and commitments to achieve universal and meaningful connectivity. After its formation in 2021 by ITU, the UN Secretary General’s Digital Roadmap project and the Envoy on Technology, the coalition has achieved significant milestones in 2022. The annual meeting, which will take place at ITU Headquarters in Geneva, will discuss the successes and challenges of the coalition so far, as well as plans for connecting the unconnected across the globe. Read more.
The Partner2Connect Digital Coalition (P2C) is a multistakeholder alliance to mobilise resources, partnerships, and commitments to achieve universal and meaningful connectivity. After its formation in 2021 by ITU, the UN Secretary General’s Digital Roadmap project and the Envoy on Technology, the coalition has achieved significant milestones in 2022. The annual meeting, which will take place at ITU Headquarters in Geneva, will discuss the successes and challenges of the coalition so far, as well as plans for connecting the unconnected across the globe. Read more.
The international conference ‘The Journey, not the Destination, Matters: The Geopolitics of Internet Routes’ is set to take place in Paris, France on 16 December. Referring to the global events of the year, including the war in Ukraine and the threat of internet fragmentation, the conference will address the geopolitical challenges of critical internet infrastructure and routing. Besides past and present challenges, panellists will consider the future of the internet and question different possibilities for the evolution of the internet under the prisms of architecture and governance. Read more.
The international conference ‘The Journey, not the Destination, Matters: The Geopolitics of Internet Routes’ is set to take place in Paris, France on 16 December. Referring to the global events of the year, including the war in Ukraine and the threat of internet fragmentation, the conference will address the geopolitical challenges of critical internet infrastructure and routing. Besides past and present challenges, panellists will consider the future of the internet and question different possibilities for the evolution of the internet under the prisms of architecture and governance. Read more.
The Pacific Telecommunication Council (PTC) Annual Conference will gather from 15 to 18 January 2023 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Pacific telecommunications community will have a chance to interact through panels and lighting talks but also in a novel format – Digital Infra Speed Dating – … Read more.
The Pacific Telecommunication Council (PTC) Annual Conference will gather from 15 to 18 January 2023 in Honolulu, Hawaii. The Pacific telecommunications community will have a chance to interact through panels and lighting talks but also in a novel format – Digital Infra Speed Dating – … Read more.
The 2023 World Economic Forum Annual Meeting will be held under the theme ‘Cooperation in a Fragmented World’ from 16 to 20 January. The 53rd Annual Meeting is returning to Davos, Switzerland after hosting its previous edition online. Read more.
The 2023 World Economic Forum Annual Meeting will be held under the theme ‘Cooperation in a Fragmented World’ from 16 to 20 January. The 53rd Annual Meeting is returning to Davos, Switzerland after hosting its previous edition online. Read more.
The Digital Watch observatory maintains a live calendar of upcoming and past events.
If you are trying to discern the overall picture after hundreds of workshops and myriad discussions during the IGF last week, you are in the right place. That’s exactly what we are doing. Diplo and the GIP started reporting from the IGF eight years ago to gain the perspective of a composite zoomed out view of this complicated tapestry woven with our individual experiences coloured by issues of interest, meetings with friends, and nuanced by corridor chats.
In addition to this panoramic view of the IGF, you can dive deeper into issues of your particular interest, following our layered reporting.
From the first layer – this text – you can navigate to the second layer, consisting of summaries of sessions and data analyses of the corpus text of the IGF 2022.
On the third layer, you will find detailed information on topics from AI to cybersecurity, as well as on main actors from the UN, the private sector, academia, and civil society. This holistic reporting provides you with comprehensive coverage of the key topics, actors, and trends beyond IGF 2022 as a single event.
This summary is based on our reports from over 100 sessions, as well as data analysis of 188 session transcripts with 1,851,317 words (approximately 3,702 pages). The data section of this report contains more detailed analyses of the text corpus of IGF 2022.
10 Highlights from IGF 2022
IGF and Global Digital Compact: New dynamic interplays
During IGF 2022, the UN Tech Envoy presented the Global Digital Compact (GDC) to the IGF community. As the new kid on the block, the GDC garnered a lot of attention, being mentioned 265 times during the IGF sessions.
With a 2024 deadline for its adoption, the GDC gave new urgency to the internet governance debate. Uncertainty about how the IGF and the GDC work together started to be cleared up in practical and useful ways. IGF deliberations will feed into the GDC.
Furthermore, better designed and more effective interplays between the IGF’s tradition and mandate and the intensity engendered by the GDC create a new dynamism in internet/digital governance.
The appointment of the new UN Secretary General’s Envoy on Technology, Indian diplomat Amandeep Gill Singh, earlier this year, created a new dynamism in the digital governance space. In the centre of this dynamism is the work on the GDC which should be part of the Pact for the Future, to be adopted in autumn 2024.
The GDC is intended to address highly controversial digital issues in an extremely polarised world. Most of today’s pressing policy issues, from security to the economy and human rights, can be viewed through a digital lens.
As the GDC will be a complex exercise, its success will be judged on several criteria:
Inclusivity of all actors that affect or are affected by digital developments
Diversity of issues addressed and perspectives reflected in the GDC
Concreteness of approaches proposed
Our hope is that the GDC will succeed in, at least, proposing a mechanism for answering the growing number of ‘calls’ from citizens, companies, and countries for solutions to problems ranging from cybercrime to dealing with misinformation and achieving a fair distribution of tax revenues in the digital economy. The list of more than 50 issues under discussion includes data protection and the regulation of AI.
Finding the ‘phone number’ to ask for help on digital problems is especially important for citizens and actors from small and developing countries who do not have institutional or individual capacities to navigate the current maze of internet governance with more than 1,000 institutions and processes. Most of them are looking for functional and straightforward solutions for the digital problems they face.
These solutions could be provided by international organisations, expert communities, tech platforms and other actors. The search for practical policy solutions could resolve the false dichotomy between multilateral and multistakeholder approaches that have consumed a lot of energy and time in the internet governance debates.
Maturing hybrid format of the IGF with some hiccups
After the prolonged pandemic, IGF 2022 in Addis Ababa returned in full swing. The IGF tradition was empowered by the vitality of the African digital community. It was a hybrid event with a total of 5.120 registered participants in situ and online attending over 300 sessions.
The hybrid format of the meetings is maturing and improving access, but has open issues still to be resolved to ensure an equitable experience for people attending online and in person.
Parliamentarians reclaim a seat at the multistakeholder table
Paradoxically or not, parliamentarians feel they have been left behind in multistakeholder discussions on internet governance and digital policy, despite being responsible for the laws governing our digital spaces. One of the reasons for the absence of parliamentarians has been their unique status of being part of national governance structures but not being part of governments’ representation.
Since IGF 2019, parliaments have been reclaiming a seat at the multistakeholder table. Some of the main goals of the IGF 2022 parliamentary track were to improve the ability of parliaments to deal with digital issues, get parliamentarians more involved in multistakeholder processes and discussions, and make sure that laws are passed by parliament and not through parliament.
Launched in 2019, the IGF parliamentary track gained new momentum this year. More focused discussions – this time on addressing cyber threats – and stronger messages characterised this year’s track, which saw particularly strong engagement from parliaments of developing countries.
When discussing their role in addressing cyber threats, parliamentarians acknowledged that they have a duty to ensure a proper balance between measures to enhance cybersecurity and tackle cybercrime, on the one hand, and the protection of internationally-recognised human rights, on the other hand.
They also committed to encouraging effective cooperation – nationally, regionally and internationally – between public and private actors in creating a more safe and secure cyberspace, and in building an environment of trust conducive to such cooperation.
Three strong calls reverberated throughout the discussions:
Parliaments should contribute to strengthening national multistakeholder dialogue on internet and digital policy issues, and ensuring that national interests and priorities are reflected in international processes.
More efforts are needed to build the capacity of parliamentarians to work on digital policy issues, including through training and skills building. This will help ensure that they engage in meaningful debates before passing legislation for the digital space.
Parliaments should have their own seat at the table in regional and global processes dealing with digital issues.
The fact that the IGF has been paying increasing attention to parliamentarians in recent years has resulted in concrete outcomes. Earlier this year, an African Parliamentary Network on Internet Governance was launched, inspired by parliamentary activities at IGF 2021. The network had a strong presence in Addis, starting with a training session right before IGF, and continuing with its members’ active engagement throughout the entire meeting.
This year, the IGF was ‘younger’ than usual, being held in Africa, the continent of young people. Even visually, one could notice many younger people at the sessions and in the corridors of the Addis venue. In addition to participation, youth was one of the thematic tracks. IGF 2022 provided an additional push for the IGF Secretariat’s Strategy on strengthening engagement of youth in internet governance.
A couple of years ago, the IGF Secretariat launched a Strategy on strengthening engagement of youth in internet governance, cementing the acknowledgement that young people should be empowered to be more actively engaged in internet governance processes. In line with this strategy, a Youth Track was part of the overall IGF 2022 process, and included a series of capacity building workshops in the run-up to Addis and a Youth Summit during the IGF meeting.
Throughout their discussions on the role of youth in digital transformation, participants in the summit stressed – once again – that ‘youth has to be recognised as a serious stakeholder in policy and regulatory development’. This one message stuck with us as quite powerful, being framed as a call – that hopefully many will answer – to truly support young people to be the architects of a safe, secure, and inclusive digital future.
And if we may take this one step further, we would add: In addition to youth, don’t forget to add a seat at the table for future generations! The digital space we shape today will be part of the legacy we leave for them.
At IGF 2022, there was a noticeable increase in the participation of diplomats and government officials. It reflected the growing relevance of digital issues for national diplomacies worldwide. Many countries are in the process of developing digital foreign policy and diplomacy approaches and institutions. Two sessions addressed the building of digital diplomacy and foreign policy in Africa.
IGF 2022 showed clearly that digital inclusion is a priority and critical issue for African countries. As more and more optical cables are laid around the African continent, and new satellite technologies are employed for ‘last mile access’, discussion on digital inclusion evolved towards other aspects of exclusion: cost of access, language barriers, gender, skills, etc.
A holistic digital inclusion requires taking into consideration reflections on gender, youth, language, finance, education, and other critical factors that all play a role in the full realisation of the digital potential of citizens, communities, and countries worldwide.
There are efforts by various stakeholders – in Africa and beyond – determined to bring connectivity to those who do not yet have internet access. Locally-owned and operated networks (be they wired, wireless, or fibre) and innovative initiatives such as the Internet Backpack, for instance, are seen as solutions to fill connectivity gaps and provide access where traditional telecoms networks do not. Low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites also offer new opportunities to connect the unconnected, but they come with new governance and regulatory issues in areas such as spectrum allocation and space law.
Yet, it takes more than cables and satellites to make the internet accessible and inclusive.
For many experts, the path to meaningful and holistic internet access is through inclusion: closing the digital skills divide; adopting inclusive measures that embrace women and girls in ICT; developing more products and services for use by people with a disability, and more elderly-friendly devices, applications, and services; and teaching users about rights and responsibilities in language they can understand. The same holds for developing content in local languages: Users who don’t speak English – widely considered the internet’s lingua franca – won’t find much value in an internet which rarely speaks their language.
The red line which will make or break the internet is adherence to the use of the same core protocols, in particular, the TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). New risks will emerge with the shift from core protocols, TCP/IP and HTML towards, for example, a protocol for metaverse platforms.
If countries and companies start using different internet protocols, the risk of fragmentation will increase. In the meantime, differences and distortions will also emerge from content filtering, companies’ exclusive spaces, walled gardens, and the wide diversity of policy and regulation.
With a dedicated sub-theme and a policy network of its own, fragmentation was a buzzword at this year’s IGF. And yet there is no one unique understanding of what internet fragmentation means.
Coming soon: The word fragmentation has been applied to so many issues and concepts that it has become challenging to understand its true significance. Stay tuned for a Diplo blog post on taxonomy and meanings – our contribution to the debate that started at the IGF (and we trust will continue).
At the technical/connectivity layer, a lack of interoperability between core standards and protocols is a risk to the global nature of the internet. On the application and content layers, policies of tech platforms and regulations imposed by governments (in particular content-related ones) can contribute to internet fragmentation, causing the user experience to be distorted. In addition, the filtering and blocking of certain content in some jurisdictions and different approaches to data sovereignty increase the risk of weakening the global internet on a policy and social level.
The growing geopolitical trend of imposing economic and cyber sanctions can also impact the availability of critical internet resources and online services in countries under sanctions. A stronger push towards digital sovereignty as a part of national sovereignty is further seen as an accelerator of fragmentation.
Fragmentation of internet governance and coordination.
There are numerous solutions to avoid internet fragmentation:
Building trust on the internet
Adopting global protocols and standards such as IPv6 and IDNs
Fostering industry-wide collaboration
Assessing the potential impact of new laws and regulations on the architecture of the internet
Promoting international regulatory collaboration and developing international standards around issues such as hate speech and disinformation
Reinforcing the need to avoid lack of coordination between policy processes at ICANN, ITU, standardisation organisations, and the IGF
A somewhat bold proposal was also put forward: UN member states would sign a declaration recognising the internet as a peaceful environment for the public good; this – it was said – could be a confidence-building measure to avoid internet fragmentation. A more direct, easier approach would be to ensure that the upcoming UN GDC helps establish a new consensus on digital governance that would preserve the core technical infrastructure of the internet while providing space for other policies to be adjusted to regional, national, and cultural specificities.
While the technology for such a network does not seem to be an issue, the challenges are pretty much earthly: How will the concentration of power, resources, and patents by big tech companies translate into an interplanetary paradigm? What are the prospects for collaboration and resource sharing, given the increasing militarisation of outer space?
AI: Fewer ethics debates – more governance proposals
If in past years, there used to be much talk about the good and bad of AI, and about overarching values and principles to guide the development of AI, this year the discussions focused on AI governance and regulation: Where are we with AI regulation? What is missing? What is feasible, and how can we get there?
How can we regulate AI in a way that encourages its development and use for the good of people and society around the world? This question came up in several IGF 2022 discussions, but there is no single answer. While some jurisdictions are developing their own comprehensive regulatory frameworks for AI, some argue in favour of step-by-step approaches involving governance experimentation and policy sandboxes, as these are considered useful to increase transparency, trust, and public support for AI platforms.
Technical standards are another governance mechanism that translates principles such as fairness and transparency into concrete tech requirements and defines how a system should behave. Once guidelines and regulations are in place, ecosystems of assurance and certification are eventually needed to assess and communicate compliance with the rules.
But the possibility of reaching a globally binding agreement to regulate AI is seen with scepticism. A semi-bottom-up approach might come to the rescue: This would entail different stages, where agreements at the regional level would be built first, and then different interfaces for cross-border cooperation (including terms of knowledge transfer) would be defined.
Increasing trust in the use of AI also requires bridging professional and policy silos. Tech companies, developers, engineers, product managers, and data scientists must participate in conversations with policymakers if we are to develop and enforce effective and efficient regulations. Approaches include creating more opportunities for regulators to get closer to the technical field and encouraging more public-private partnerships and initiatives such as innovation hubs and hackathons.
To decrease the widening gap between policy and innovation and enhance public trust in AI solutions, an open approach to governance is needed; corporations must embed ethical and culturally sensitive principles in the design of AI technologies and products; and a multistakeholder approach is required in the formulation, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of regulation.
Civil society has a role to play, too: It should bring people’s voices and real-life experiences into discussions on the use and development of AI. If these are things that we have heard at previous IGFs, new(er) issues were also emerging. Among them was a discussion on AI-based affective computing – in short, the use of AI to recognise, interpret, and simulate human emotions. As the technology is not sufficiently advanced to correctly identify human emotions, especially in different cultural and social contexts, relying on it to make decisions comes with considerable challenges (e.g. bias, discrimination, and even risk of physical or emotional harm). The message is clear: Do not over-rely on affective computing systems without fully understanding their shortcomings.
The metaverse is pretty much a work in progress, from a technical point of view, but discussions have already started on potential regulatory issues (e.g. security and crime, safety and data protection, applicable legislation and enforcement) and how to address them. There seems to be agreement on the need to have a set of common rules and codes of conduct for the metaverse(s). The extent and depth of such frameworks, however, seem to differ.
Regulating the metaverse poses similar challenges to policymakers as regulating and governing cyberspace and the internet. So lessons learnt from the latter can be applied to the first: regulation needs to address risks, but without unduly hindering innovation; ethical principles should be embedded as much as possible into both regulations and the development of the tech itself; all relevant stakeholders have to be engaged in policy and regulatory processes.
Cybersecurity has always been featured prominently in the IGF agenda. It was one of five main themes this year, with 24 sessions. Most debates reflected well-known themes without offering new ideas or major conceptual breakthroughs. Even the cyber aspects of the current conflicts such as the Ukraine war were sporadically mentioned in the IGF debates.
The power of cyber diplomacy
We publish this report just as the UN OEWG continues its discussions on the norms of responsible behaviour in cyberspace. The OEWG itself is a continuation of efforts made by the international community to shape the norms of responsible behaviour in cyberspace at the UN, previously in the UN GGEs and then in the first iteration of the OEWG.
The implementation of the already agreed-upon framework has been described as long overdue. A way to achieve this is through the Cybersecurity Development Goals (CDGs), which aim to close the digital divide, increase resilience by fostering access to digital transformation, and effectuate international law and norms to curtail malicious cyber activities.
But broader questions of geopolitics have a very strong impact on the extent to which progress in cyber norms will be made, according to this IGF. Countries have moved from primarily wanting to protect their nations from cyberattacks to considering economic and trade issues as well. Yet, there is room for optimism – the ongoing work of the OEWG shows that diplomats of all interested countries still negotiate, which reinforces the power of diplomacy.
Addressing cyberattacks
There are certain instruments a country has at hand to address a cyberattack. But it first must attribute the attack to a specific actor. Then it can apply cyber diplomacy instruments, such as information sharing, public naming and shaming of the perpetrator, diplomatic measures such as recalling ambassadors or even completely cutting diplomatic ties, using criminal indictments, and sanctions. The last option on the spectrum, rarely used, is military action.
Discussions touched on the role of parliaments in addressing cyberattacks and noted how parliamentarians could act as a link between high-level conversations with other stakeholders involved in addressing cyber threats. Civil society can collaborate with parliaments to ensure accountability and oversight. Civil society and the private sector were encouraged to see parliamentarians as a connection to make their voices heard.
What we often neglect when a cyberattack occurs is its societal harm and impact. There is an increasing need to develop a harm methodology with quantitative and qualitative indicators to document the harm of cyberattacks to people, communities, and societies. We need a taxonomy of cyber harm where all stakeholders can contribute to inform the next steps in developing effective legislation, push the private sector to increase security standards, and inform civil society how to help victims. Measuring harm needs to be part of a bigger process involving all parties, where silos are broken: Governments introduce new legislation, the private sector creates new security standards, and civil society supports victims and awareness raising.
The cybersecurity job market
The cyber threat landscape is increasingly complex, and good cyber defenders are needed. Cyber capacity development is now a priority on the international cooperation agenda. But on the national level, there is an overall lack of impetus by government institutions on cyber capacity building, a low number of cybersecurity courses at university levels (sometimes with outdated materials), and the inability of recent graduates to get cybersecurity jobs because they lack experience.
Some recommendations suggested that education and training should be less theoretical (more concrete and practical) and more diverse. Women and young people should be encouraged to join this sector, and greater collaboration between industry and education should be established. A capacity development approach connecting industries and educational institutions should ensure there is no supply-demand mismatch. Workforce development strategies should be country-specific, as the need for cybersecurity personnel varies depending on the country’s levels of industrialisation and digitalisation.
There are harmless advertising techniques meant to prompt a user to make a purchase, and then there are practices that cross the threshold of what is ethical and fair, also referred to as dark commercial patterns.
One of the main issues in dealing with dark patterns is to identify the moment when the threshold is reached. The techniques are constantly changing, so the way we defined them a few years ago might already be outdated today. Determining who’s responsible is another problem. Is it the online store that’s using dark patterns, or the developer of such interface – or both?
In order to tackle these practices, authorities may require access to the algorithms behind the advertising, which is an uphill battle considering that companies look at algorithms as trade secrets. Stronger consumer awareness could also go a long way. Although it won’t stop businesses from using persuasive techniques, it could help prevent consumers from falling into the trap.
Data governance: From ideological stances to practical solutions
Data governance is maturing. Many discussions moved beyond the generic notion of ‘data’ to understand the specificities of personal, corporate, and public data as they implement different governance solutions. Data localisation is not ideologically dismissed as a danger for the current Internet but is looked upon when it makes sense, such as dealing with critical national data.
Global data governance, cross-border data flows and reconciling different regulatory regimes remain on the IGF agenda. The fragmented data governance landscape is further complicated by the gaps between data protection and privacy legislation, as well as in the implementation and enforcement of already existing rules.
The harvesting of raw data by developed and developing countries is also a concern. Many developing countries are apprehensive that they will become major providers of raw data to external platforms while having to rely on the foreign knowledge produced from that data.
Ironically, then, another impact of the disparate regulatory landscape is its limitations to cross-border data flows on the global digital economy, protection of privacy, and development of national economies. Therefore, these countries need to evaluate whether to regulate digital spaces to balance digital sovereignty and the harmonisation of regulatory approaches.
Despite the disagreements, there were a few things that everyone agreed on. These were the need for flexible regulatory systems that allow for technology development while protecting users, the need to make it easier for non-personal data to flow across borders, and the need for minimal global rules for data transfers.
In addition, a future global system of data governance must strike a balance between public and private value creation in the digital economy (the idea of a social contract for data that sets out a bundle of rights) and establish ex-ante requirements for transparency.
Access to data and security
Timely and efficient access to data for security and digital evidence remains a challenge. The traditional methods of accessing digital evidence through mutual legal assistance treaties are ineffective. New considerations related to facial recognition technology, AI, and the protection of human rights must be embedded in the mechanisms for access to data for security. Additionally, data that needs to be accessed for security and digital evidence is often in the hands of private companies.
The open-source intelligence (OSINT) tools struggle to legally identify the extent to which non-open source data, such as data purchased from private companies, should form part of OSINT tools.
To continue the work on common principles of trustworthy data flows, it is necessary to create an interoperable and efficient legal framework that protects the rights of individuals, such as the rights to privacy and due process, and establish transparency mechanisms and human rights impact assessments related to new technologies.
Online safety regulation
Another area that would greatly benefit from baseline principles in regulatory regimes is online safety and platform regulation. While the value of such baseline principles is not disputed, regulators struggle with the implementation and enforcement of existing rules and businesses navigating the diverse landscape. New cooperation by the regulators themselves across jurisdictions and embedding safety standards during the design of platforms and apps may be the way forward.
Charting a path towards a safer, rights-based internet
Part of the discussion on making the internet inclusive focuses on ensuring that the online space is safe and secure for everyone while simultaneously upholding and protecting people’s human rights.
Privacy and security are often pitted against each other. But that’s a false binary, experts warn. The two are mutually reinforcing, and one cannot meaningfully exist without the other. So, for instance, users who rely on encrypted communications to keep safe (not only online but also in the physical world) shouldn’t be put at risk through backdoor access. There are other ways of identifying perpetrators, preventing crime, and keeping people safe, and it’s through respect for human rights that the internet can become safer and more connected.
Gender-based violence: Online and offline impacts
Gender-based violence is particularly worrisome, in some regions experiencing a surge. While this is not a new problem, digital technology has amplified abusive behaviour – such as hate speech and other more violent behaviour – against women and girls, and other gender identities. Online violence has an offline impact, and vice versa.
NGOs, the private sector, and governments are taking on the fight against online abuse as well as their resources permit. Stronger enforcement, local solutions addressing local contexts, and more funding for civil society would make a more significant difference. We also need more efforts to identify and eliminate bias in the data and algorithms used for AI systems.
Children and technology: Limiting the risk
Protecting children and young people – who make up almost one-third of the internet population in many countries – from harm is among stakeholders’ top priorities. Two main concerns, data protection in online learning and sexual imagery, were tackled during this IGF.
At the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, governments and educators rushed to introduce online platforms to keep children engaged in learning. Some of the platforms used data practices that were deemed harmful to children’s rights, in most cases without the consent and knowledge of their parents and guardians. If online educational platforms are to remain the norm, experts suggest that these platforms be audited to determine how children’s data is being gathered, processed, and stored.
With more children and young people spending time online, not least due to the pandemic, the amount of self-generated sexual imagery circulating online is also increasing. Although not all of it is the result of abuse and coercion, content voluntarily generated by kids can still be misused. Experts have therefore argued for more user-friendly material to explain to children and adolescents the repercussions of their risky behaviour.
ITU estimates that approximately 5.3 billion people will use the internet in 2022. This represents an increase of 24% compared to 2019.
Despite a considerable rise in internet penetration over the last four years, participants acknowledged that to make a real difference in people’s lives, internet access needs to comply with sufficient standards – including affordability, inclusivity, sustainability, and links to human capacity development. If policymakers focus only on improving the single metric of basic connectivity, efforts to improve internet access and use for all will fall short, and the digital divide will continue to widen.
A whole-of-society response to the lack of connectivity and other challenges of the digital age was highlighted.
Improvement in connectivity could be achieved through public and private partnerships, local access provision through community networks, using universal service/access funds in financing access, infrastructure sharing, and decentralised approaches to infrastructure development.
Proposed alternative ways of connecting the unconnected include Australia’s Stand programme, a disaster satellite service funded by the government to strengthen telecommunications. Such combined efforts are needed, especially in Africa, to expand its terrestrial and extra-terrestrial internet coverage, to address emergency alerts and communications.
It is paramount that policymakers recognise the value of small operators, such as community networks, and formulate timely policies to assist them. Relying on community networks as a backup for essential infrastructure was also highlighted, especially during crises and natural disasters.
The role of communities of practice was noted in another session, emphasising that they can ensure a stronger representation of African interests in global digital discussions. Substantial African diaspora communities, especially at universities worldwide, are seen as a great asset in strengthening African representation and promoting African interests.
Access has also been discussed in the context of internet shutdowns. A session dedicated to the growing number of internet shutdowns worldwide presented OPTIMA, an online library containing national internet shutdown need assessment reports. Documentation of the consequences of shutdowns is a significant resource helping raise awareness and enhance capacity development, especially when there is a lack of technical training.
Ensuring equitable access to digital healthcare
Another issue prominent on the IGF’s agenda on Day 4 was telemedicine and fairer access to internet health. The discussion built on two years of experience charting a way forward for the future of digital health.
A new research paper, Online health indicators in LAC: Access to safe and affordable health solutions using the internet was introduced as a backdrop for a discussion. focusing on data collection around two axes: access and quality of medicines, and digital health information. The study establishes a methodology for evaluating health solutions using the internet across Latin America and the Caribbean.
Although a growing number of countries have recently adopted laws to regulate telemedicine, it is still a grey area in many countries. Regulating the importation of medicines via the internet can also be crucial, since the availability of medicines can be higher and the prices lower online. There are numerous cases where the price of certain medicines is much lower in neighbouring countries. For instance, in some countries in Latin America the disparity of prices for the same medicine is estimated to be up to 171%.
With the spike in the number of digital healthcare providers and digital well-being apps, challenges abound because not all tools and services are of uniform quality. These are rarely evaluated for effectiveness and trustworthiness. Thus, an effort is needed to institutionalise digital health in the existing health system, provide suitable cybersecurity measures to resolve safety and privacy concerns, and ensure special provisions to guarantee accessibility for people with disabilities. Finally, promoting digital health literacy so that people can participate meaningfully is still weak but still indispensable.
Fighting untruths, such as online misinformation and disinformation, was one of the main sociocultural concerns brought up in discussions. Some of the approaches suggested were: a pre-bunking approach to fighting misinformation, promoting quality information that complies with good journalistic practices and the design and implementation of digital literacy programmes to fight disinformation. It was, however, noted that if the recipients of such programmes cannot read or write, digital media training seems like an unrealistic approach to tackle this issue.
One way of monitoring content is through platform regulation. Regulation of digital platforms should not be driven by particular interest groups, but rather guarantee basic human rights. Regulations that include mechanisms of control and accountability should be built to develop legal frameworks that protect citizens.
A core focus area for regulators is transparency. To achieve meaningful transparency and accountability in terms of content moderation requires inter alia timely audits and evaluations of platforms by third parties, advocacy and monitoring by civil society, the use of knowledge brokers to interpret technical information for regulators and consumer awareness of their digital rights and responsibilities.
In times of crisis, it’s even more important to stick to rules everyone agrees on to manage content and platforms. A major contribution in this regard is the Declaration of principles for content and platform governance in times of crisis launched by AccessNow during IGF 2022. The presentation recognised the challenge of ad hoc responses when a crisis escalates or when there is ongoing public and political pressure on platforms to react.
Towards universal internet principles
What are the core principles of the internet that we should focus on preserving? Some that were listed during this IGF were the rule of law, fairness, and accountability (for both the public sector and companies); multistakeholder governance (including in policy making); openness and transparency in decision-making processes; a human-centric approach (i.e. prioritising the needs of users and serving individuals); the public interest; engaging young people in policy-making; and trustworthiness, reliability, and inclusivity.
One of the most recent initiatives outlining internet principles is the Declaration for the Future of the Internet (DFI), which outlines basic principles on how nation states should act in relation to the internet.
A debate sparked between the representatives of countries that have signed the declaration and those that have not. There are several reasons why countries might decide not to join the declaration – refraining from signing a document that one did not negotiate was cited the most.
While state-focused, the declaration still strongly supports multistakeholderism – it maintains that multistakeholder approaches are needed to translate the principles into concrete and enforceable actions. The declaration says that civil society, the private sector, the technical community, academia, and other interested parties have a role to play in encouraging more states to follow these principles and holding states accountable for them. However, some argue that we might need to refine the multistakeholder model to ensure a proportional representation of both small and underrepresented groups and larger and stronger actors.
Reassessing stakeholders’ roles in IG
Participants assessed governments’ role in internet governance and noted that more policy innovations are needed. The UN GDC should be a valuable avenue to address the role of governments.
There have also been calls to expand the scope of youth participation in internet governance. For instance, the session Global youth engagement in IG: Successes and opportunities addressed the manifold challenges youth encounter, such as limited space for participation in IG decision-making at the national level, gender stereotyping, and accessing content in languages other than English. Fostering young people’s sustained participation in IG will require decision-makers to remove these and other obstacles, and actively listen to unexpected ideas.
Moreover, it is essential to create spaces for different stakeholders to meet together on a permanent basis. The IGF is a longstanding, successful example of an open, impartial, and bottom-up multistakeholder process. Participants stressed that awareness of global and national IGFs on national levels needs to be actively stimulated starting at IGF 2022.
This data analysis is based on 188 session transcripts with 1,851,317 words (approximately 3,702 pages), which is 2.89 times more than the complete works of William Shakespeare.
Below we provide a detailed analysis of prominent digital policy prefixes as well as other related concepts that shared the stage at IGF 2022.
Country mentions
You can find the prominence of different countries by counting the number of references to a country or a city belonging to the country. By clicking on a particular country, you will be able to see the number of mentions of the country in the IGF sessions.
Prefix analysis
Digital remained the most used term with a total of 5,346 references, which is nearly a 77 percent increase in frequency compared to 2021 and over a hundred percent increase compared to 2020. The use of other prefixes followed a similar pattern in comparison to the previous two years.
Online and cyber took second and third place respectively, with 3,010 and 1,789 mentions. The word tech came in fourth place, which is a significant decrease in comparison to 2021, when it held the second spot. Finally, virtual remained in fifth place, accounting for slightly more than 2 percent of the total number of analysed prefixes.
Frequent words and concepts
Digital Compact was another prominent [phrase or word chunk] at this year’s IGF. It was mentioned 308 times. Other prominent word chunks include fragmentation and AI governance, ITU, and metaverse, to name a few. A comprehensive list of popular word chunks is available below.
Art@IGF
Art@IGF combines digital governance, art and technology to give new insights on the digital challenges of our time. The IGF 2022 virtual exhibition featured two sci-fi exhibitions: AI governance & AfroFuturism.
AI governance
AfroFuturism and sci-fi
Diplo @ IGF
Diplo and Geneva Internet Platform @ IGF
25-26 November 2022
Training for African parliamentarians (co-organised by Diplo)
28 November 2022
Briefing for Francophonie participants at the IGF (presentation by Jovan Kurbalija)
29 November 2022
Fragmented reality. New horizons of digital distrust (participation by Jovan Kurbalija)
29 November 2022
Digital self-determination: a pillar of digital democracy (participation by Marilia Maciel)
29 November 2022
Reassessing government role in IG: How to embrace Leviathan (participation by Jovan Kurbalija)
1 December 2022
Strengthening African voices in global digital policy (hosted by Diplo)
1 December 2022
Parliamentary session 3: Unpacking UN process (participation by Vladimir Radunovic and Sorina Teleanu)
2 December 2022
Protect the digital rights and data security for the elderly (participation by Jovan Kurbalija)
Strengthening African voices in global digital policy
Are African voices heard in global digital policy? The short answer would be not as much as they should. This is the summary of the findings of the recently published report Stronger digital voices from Africa: Building African digital foreign policy and diplomacy presented during the workshop. The report, published by Diplo, provides a snapshot of Africa’s digital diplomacy, drawing on lessons learned, good practices from Africa and beyond, and some of the underlying challenges to be addressed through whole of government and whole of society approaches.
The study shows that African countries are not really lagging behind more developed countries in formulating a digital foreign policy, as only a few countries worldwide have already launched comprehensive digital foreign policy strategies. Elements of digital foreign policy can also be found in the national strategies and policies of African countries and continental and regional organisations focusing on specific digital policy issues – from connectivity and cybersecurity to capacity development.
Africa finds itself amid the so-called digital cold war in the making, stemming from aggressive tech competition between large/powerful countries (like China and the USA), shaping the environment in which Africa contributes to global digital policy. Africa, therefore, has to position itself to maximise its development potential and avoid risks. To address these challenges and maximise its potential, African countries need a holistic approach to activate all possible resources to represent their digital interests.
The lack of buy-in from African policymakers for digital transformation and technology must also be addressed. Buy-in could be nurtured via the initiatives such as the African Parliamentary Network on Internet Governance (APNIG).
If you are trying to discern the overall picture after hundreds of workshops and myriad discussions during the IGF last week, you are in the right place. That’s exactly what we are doing. Diplo and the GIP started reporting from the IGF eight years ago to gain the perspective of a composite zoomed out view of this complicated tapestry woven with our individual experiences coloured by issues of interest, meetings with friends, and nuanced by corridor chats.
In addition to this panoramic view of the IGF, you can dive deeper into issues of your particular interest, following our layered reporting.
From the first layer – this text – you can navigate to the second layer, consisting of summaries of sessions and data analyses of the corpus text of the IGF 2022.
On the third layer, you will find detailed information on topics from AI to cybersecurity, as well as on main actors from the UN, the private sector, academia, and civil society. This holistic reporting provides you with comprehensive coverage of the key topics, actors, and trends beyond IGF 2022 as a single event.
This summary is based on our reports from over 100 sessions, as well as data analysis of 188 session transcripts with 1,851,317 words (approximately 3,702 pages). The data section of this report contains more detailed analyses of the text corpus of IGF 2022.
10 Highlights from IGF 2022
IGF and Global Digital Compact: New dynamic interplays
During IGF 2022, the UN Tech Envoy presented the Global Digital Compact (GDC) to the IGF community. As the new kid on the block, the GDC garnered a lot of attention, being mentioned 265 times during the IGF sessions.
With a 2024 deadline for its adoption, the GDC gave new urgency to the internet governance debate. Uncertainty about how the IGF and the GDC work together started to be cleared up in practical and useful ways. IGF deliberations will feed into the GDC.
Furthermore, better designed and more effective interplays between the IGF’s tradition and mandate and the intensity engendered by the GDC create a new dynamism in internet/digital governance.
The appointment of the new UN Secretary General’s Envoy on Technology, Indian diplomat Amandeep Gill Singh, earlier this year, created a new dynamism in the digital governance space. In the centre of this dynamism is the work on the GDC which should be part of the Pact for the Future, to be adopted in autumn 2024.
The GDC is intended to address highly controversial digital issues in an extremely polarised world. Most of today’s pressing policy issues, from security to the economy and human rights, can be viewed through a digital lens.
As the GDC will be a complex exercise, its success will be judged on several criteria:
Inclusivity of all actors that affect or are affected by digital developments
Diversity of issues addressed and perspectives reflected in the GDC
Concreteness of approaches proposed
Our hope is that the GDC will succeed in, at least, proposing a mechanism for answering the growing number of ‘calls’ from citizens, companies, and countries for solutions to problems ranging from cybercrime to dealing with misinformation and achieving a fair distribution of tax revenues in the digital economy. The list of more than 50 issues under discussion includes data protection and the regulation of AI.
Finding the ‘phone number’ to ask for help on digital problems is especially important for citizens and actors from small and developing countries who do not have institutional or individual capacities to navigate the current maze of internet governance with more than 1,000 institutions and processes. Most of them are looking for functional and straightforward solutions for the digital problems they face.
These solutions could be provided by international organisations, expert communities, tech platforms and other actors. The search for practical policy solutions could resolve the false dichotomy between multilateral and multistakeholder approaches that have consumed a lot of energy and time in the internet governance debates.
Maturing hybrid format of the IGF with some hiccups
After the prolonged pandemic, IGF 2022 in Addis Ababa returned in full swing. The IGF tradition was empowered by the vitality of the African digital community. It was a hybrid event with a total of 5.120 registered participants in situ and online attending over 300 sessions.
The hybrid format of the meetings is maturing and improving access, but has open issues still to be resolved to ensure an equitable experience for people attending online and in person.
Parliamentarians reclaim a seat at the multistakeholder table
Paradoxically or not, parliamentarians feel they have been left behind in multistakeholder discussions on internet governance and digital policy, despite being responsible for the laws governing our digital spaces. One of the reasons for the absence of parliamentarians has been their unique status of being part of national governance structures but not being part of governments’ representation.
Since IGF 2019, parliaments have been reclaiming a seat at the multistakeholder table. Some of the main goals of the IGF 2022 parliamentary track were to improve the ability of parliaments to deal with digital issues, get parliamentarians more involved in multistakeholder processes and discussions, and make sure that laws are passed by parliament and not through parliament.
Launched in 2019, the IGF parliamentary track gained new momentum this year. More focused discussions – this time on addressing cyber threats – and stronger messages characterised this year’s track, which saw particularly strong engagement from parliaments of developing countries.
When discussing their role in addressing cyber threats, parliamentarians acknowledged that they have a duty to ensure a proper balance between measures to enhance cybersecurity and tackle cybercrime, on the one hand, and the protection of internationally-recognised human rights, on the other hand.
They also committed to encouraging effective cooperation – nationally, regionally and internationally – between public and private actors in creating a more safe and secure cyberspace, and in building an environment of trust conducive to such cooperation.
Three strong calls reverberated throughout the discussions:
Parliaments should contribute to strengthening national multistakeholder dialogue on internet and digital policy issues, and ensuring that national interests and priorities are reflected in international processes.
More efforts are needed to build the capacity of parliamentarians to work on digital policy issues, including through training and skills building. This will help ensure that they engage in meaningful debates before passing legislation for the digital space.
Parliaments should have their own seat at the table in regional and global processes dealing with digital issues.
The fact that the IGF has been paying increasing attention to parliamentarians in recent years has resulted in concrete outcomes. Earlier this year, an African Parliamentary Network on Internet Governance was launched, inspired by parliamentary activities at IGF 2021. The network had a strong presence in Addis, starting with a training session right before IGF, and continuing with its members’ active engagement throughout the entire meeting.
This year, the IGF was ‘younger’ than usual, being held in Africa, the continent of young people. Even visually, one could notice many younger people at the sessions and in the corridors of the Addis venue. In addition to participation, youth was one of the thematic tracks. IGF 2022 provided an additional push for the IGF Secretariat’s Strategy on strengthening engagement of youth in internet governance.
A couple of years ago, the IGF Secretariat launched a Strategy on strengthening engagement of youth in internet governance, cementing the acknowledgement that young people should be empowered to be more actively engaged in internet governance processes. In line with this strategy, a Youth Track was part of the overall IGF 2022 process, and included a series of capacity building workshops in the run-up to Addis and a Youth Summit during the IGF meeting.
Throughout their discussions on the role of youth in digital transformation, participants in the summit stressed – once again – that ‘youth has to be recognised as a serious stakeholder in policy and regulatory development’. This one message stuck with us as quite powerful, being framed as a call – that hopefully many will answer – to truly support young people to be the architects of a safe, secure, and inclusive digital future.
And if we may take this one step further, we would add: In addition to youth, don’t forget to add a seat at the table for future generations! The digital space we shape today will be part of the legacy we leave for them.
At IGF 2022, there was a noticeable increase in the participation of diplomats and government officials. It reflected the growing relevance of digital issues for national diplomacies worldwide. Many countries are in the process of developing digital foreign policy and diplomacy approaches and institutions. Two sessions addressed the building of digital diplomacy and foreign policy in Africa.
IGF 2022 showed clearly that digital inclusion is a priority and critical issue for African countries. As more and more optical cables are laid around the African continent, and new satellite technologies are employed for ‘last mile access’, discussion on digital inclusion evolved towards other aspects of exclusion: cost of access, language barriers, gender, skills, etc.
A holistic digital inclusion requires taking into consideration reflections on gender, youth, language, finance, education, and other critical factors that all play a role in the full realisation of the digital potential of citizens, communities, and countries worldwide.
There are efforts by various stakeholders – in Africa and beyond – determined to bring connectivity to those who do not yet have internet access. Locally-owned and operated networks (be they wired, wireless, or fibre) and innovative initiatives such as the Internet Backpack, for instance, are seen as solutions to fill connectivity gaps and provide access where traditional telecoms networks do not. Low Earth orbit (LEO) satellites also offer new opportunities to connect the unconnected, but they come with new governance and regulatory issues in areas such as spectrum allocation and space law.
Yet, it takes more than cables and satellites to make the internet accessible and inclusive.
For many experts, the path to meaningful and holistic internet access is through inclusion: closing the digital skills divide; adopting inclusive measures that embrace women and girls in ICT; developing more products and services for use by people with a disability, and more elderly-friendly devices, applications, and services; and teaching users about rights and responsibilities in language they can understand. The same holds for developing content in local languages: Users who don’t speak English – widely considered the internet’s lingua franca – won’t find much value in an internet which rarely speaks their language.
The red line which will make or break the internet is adherence to the use of the same core protocols, in particular, the TCP/IP (Transmission Control Protocol/Internet Protocol). New risks will emerge with the shift from core protocols, TCP/IP and HTML towards, for example, a protocol for metaverse platforms.
If countries and companies start using different internet protocols, the risk of fragmentation will increase. In the meantime, differences and distortions will also emerge from content filtering, companies’ exclusive spaces, walled gardens, and the wide diversity of policy and regulation.
With a dedicated sub-theme and a policy network of its own, fragmentation was a buzzword at this year’s IGF. And yet there is no one unique understanding of what internet fragmentation means.
At the technical/connectivity layer, a lack of interoperability between core standards and protocols is a risk to the global nature of the internet. On the application and content layers, policies of tech platforms and regulations imposed by governments (in particular content-related ones) can contribute to internet fragmentation, causing the user experience to be distorted. In addition, the filtering and blocking of certain content in some jurisdictions and different approaches to data sovereignty increase the risk of weakening the global internet on a policy and social level.
The growing geopolitical trend of imposing economic and cyber sanctions can also impact the availability of critical internet resources and online services in countries under sanctions. A stronger push towards digital sovereignty as a part of national sovereignty is further seen as an accelerator of fragmentation.
Fragmentation of internet governance and coordination.
There are numerous solutions to avoid internet fragmentation:
Building trust on the internet
Adopting global protocols and standards such as IPv6 and IDNs
Fostering industry-wide collaboration
Assessing the potential impact of new laws and regulations on the architecture of the internet
Promoting international regulatory collaboration and developing international standards around issues such as hate speech and disinformation
Reinforcing the need to avoid lack of coordination between policy processes at ICANN, ITU, standardisation organisations, and the IGF
A somewhat bold proposal was also put forward: UN member states would sign a declaration recognising the internet as a peaceful environment for the public good; this – it was said – could be a confidence-building measure to avoid internet fragmentation. A more direct, easier approach would be to ensure that the upcoming UN GDC helps establish a new consensus on digital governance that would preserve the core technical infrastructure of the internet while providing space for other policies to be adjusted to regional, national, and cultural specificities.
Coming soon: The word fragmentation has been applied to so many issues and concepts that it has become challenging to understand its true significance. Stay tuned for a Diplo blog post on taxonomy and meanings – our contribution to the debate that started at the IGF (and we trust will continue).
While the technology for such a network does not seem to be an issue, the challenges are pretty much earthly: How will the concentration of power, resources, and patents by big tech companies translate into an interplanetary paradigm? What are the prospects for collaboration and resource sharing, given the increasing militarisation of outer space?
AI: Fewer ethics debates – more governance proposals
If in past years, there used to be much talk about the good and bad of AI, and about overarching values and principles to guide the development of AI, this year the discussions focused on AI governance and regulation: Where are we with AI regulation? What is missing? What is feasible, and how can we get there?
How can we regulate AI in a way that encourages its development and use for the good of people and society around the world? This question came up in several IGF 2022 discussions, but there is no single answer. While some jurisdictions are developing their own comprehensive regulatory frameworks for AI, some argue in favour of step-by-step approaches involving governance experimentation and policy sandboxes, as these are considered useful to increase transparency, trust, and public support for AI platforms.
Technical standards are another governance mechanism that translates principles such as fairness and transparency into concrete tech requirements and defines how a system should behave. Once guidelines and regulations are in place, ecosystems of assurance and certification are eventually needed to assess and communicate compliance with the rules.
But the possibility of reaching a globally binding agreement to regulate AI is seen with scepticism. A semi-bottom-up approach might come to the rescue: This would entail different stages, where agreements at the regional level would be built first, and then different interfaces for cross-border cooperation (including terms of knowledge transfer) would be defined.
Increasing trust in the use of AI also requires bridging professional and policy silos. Tech companies, developers, engineers, product managers, and data scientists must participate in conversations with policymakers if we are to develop and enforce effective and efficient regulations. Approaches include creating more opportunities for regulators to get closer to the technical field and encouraging more public-private partnerships and initiatives such as innovation hubs and hackathons.
To decrease the widening gap between policy and innovation and enhance public trust in AI solutions, an open approach to governance is needed; corporations must embed ethical and culturally sensitive principles in the design of AI technologies and products; and a multistakeholder approach is required in the formulation, implementation, monitoring, and evaluation of regulation.
Civil society has a role to play, too: It should bring people’s voices and real-life experiences into discussions on the use and development of AI. If these are things that we have heard at previous IGFs, new(er) issues were also emerging. Among them was a discussion on AI-based affective computing – in short, the use of AI to recognise, interpret, and simulate human emotions. As the technology is not sufficiently advanced to correctly identify human emotions, especially in different cultural and social contexts, relying on it to make decisions comes with considerable challenges (e.g. bias, discrimination, and even risk of physical or emotional harm). The message is clear: Do not over-rely on affective computing systems without fully understanding their shortcomings.
The metaverse is pretty much a work in progress, from a technical point of view, but discussions have already started on potential regulatory issues (e.g. security and crime, safety and data protection, applicable legislation and enforcement) and how to address them. There seems to be agreement on the need to have a set of common rules and codes of conduct for the metaverse(s). The extent and depth of such frameworks, however, seem to differ.
Regulating the metaverse poses similar challenges to policymakers as regulating and governing cyberspace and the internet. So lessons learnt from the latter can be applied to the first: regulation needs to address risks, but without unduly hindering innovation; ethical principles should be embedded as much as possible into both regulations and the development of the tech itself; all relevant stakeholders have to be engaged in policy and regulatory processes.
Cybersecurity has always been featured prominently in the IGF agenda. It was one of five main themes this year, with 24 sessions. Most debates reflected well-known themes without offering new ideas or major conceptual breakthroughs. Even the cyber aspects of the current conflicts such as the Ukraine war were sporadically mentioned in the IGF debates.
The power of cyber diplomacy
We publish this report just as the UN OEWG continues its discussions on the norms of responsible behaviour in cyberspace. The OEWG itself is a continuation of efforts made by the international community to shape the norms of responsible behaviour in cyberspace at the UN, previously in the UN GGEs and then in the first iteration of the OEWG.
The implementation of the already agreed-upon framework has been described as long overdue. A way to achieve this is through the Cybersecurity Development Goals (CDGs), which aim to close the digital divide, increase resilience by fostering access to digital transformation, and effectuate international law and norms to curtail malicious cyber activities.
But broader questions of geopolitics have a very strong impact on the extent to which progress in cyber norms will be made, according to this IGF. Countries have moved from primarily wanting to protect their nations from cyberattacks to considering economic and trade issues as well. Yet, there is room for optimism – the ongoing work of the OEWG shows that diplomats of all interested countries still negotiate, which reinforces the power of diplomacy.
Addressing cyberattacks
There are certain instruments a country has at hand to address a cyberattack. But it first must attribute the attack to a specific actor. Then it can apply cyber diplomacy instruments, such as information sharing, public naming and shaming of the perpetrator, diplomatic measures such as recalling ambassadors or even completely cutting diplomatic ties, using criminal indictments, and sanctions. The last option on the spectrum, rarely used, is military action.
Discussions touched on the role of parliaments in addressing cyberattacks and noted how parliamentarians could act as a link between high-level conversations with other stakeholders involved in addressing cyber threats. Civil society can collaborate with parliaments to ensure accountability and oversight. Civil society and the private sector were encouraged to see parliamentarians as a connection to make their voices heard.
What we often neglect when a cyberattack occurs is its societal harm and impact. There is an increasing need to develop a harm methodology with quantitative and qualitative indicators to document the harm of cyberattacks to people, communities, and societies. We need a taxonomy of cyber harm where all stakeholders can contribute to inform the next steps in developing effective legislation, push the private sector to increase security standards, and inform civil society how to help victims. Measuring harm needs to be part of a bigger process involving all parties, where silos are broken: Governments introduce new legislation, the private sector creates new security standards, and civil society supports victims and awareness raising.
The cybersecurity job market
The cyber threat landscape is increasingly complex, and good cyber defenders are needed. Cyber capacity development is now a priority on the international cooperation agenda. But on the national level, there is an overall lack of impetus by government institutions on cyber capacity building, a low number of cybersecurity courses at university levels (sometimes with outdated materials), and the inability of recent graduates to get cybersecurity jobs because they lack experience.
Some recommendations suggested that education and training should be less theoretical (more concrete and practical) and more diverse. Women and young people should be encouraged to join this sector, and greater collaboration between industry and education should be established. A capacity development approach connecting industries and educational institutions should ensure there is no supply-demand mismatch. Workforce development strategies should be country-specific, as the need for cybersecurity personnel varies depending on the country’s levels of industrialisation and digitalisation.
There are harmless advertising techniques meant to prompt a user to make a purchase, and then there are practices that cross the threshold of what is ethical and fair, also referred to as dark commercial patterns.
One of the main issues in dealing with dark patterns is to identify the moment when the threshold is reached. The techniques are constantly changing, so the way we defined them a few years ago might already be outdated today. Determining who’s responsible is another problem. Is it the online store that’s using dark patterns, or the developer of such interface – or both?
In order to tackle these practices, authorities may require access to the algorithms behind the advertising, which is an uphill battle considering that companies look at algorithms as trade secrets. Stronger consumer awareness could also go a long way. Although it won’t stop businesses from using persuasive techniques, it could help prevent consumers from falling into the trap.
Data governance: From ideological stances to practical solutions
Data governance is maturing. Many discussions moved beyond the generic notion of ‘data’ to understand the specificities of personal, corporate, and public data as they implement different governance solutions. Data localisation is not ideologically dismissed as a danger for the current Internet but is looked upon when it makes sense, such as dealing with critical national data.
Global data governance, cross-border data flows and reconciling different regulatory regimes remain on the IGF agenda. The fragmented data governance landscape is further complicated by the gaps between data protection and privacy legislation, as well as in the implementation and enforcement of already existing rules.
The harvesting of raw data by developed and developing countries is also a concern. Many developing countries are apprehensive that they will become major providers of raw data to external platforms while having to rely on the foreign knowledge produced from that data.
Ironically, then, another impact of the disparate regulatory landscape is its limitations to cross-border data flows on the global digital economy, protection of privacy, and development of national economies. Therefore, these countries need to evaluate whether to regulate digital spaces to balance digital sovereignty and the harmonisation of regulatory approaches.
Despite the disagreements, there were a few things that everyone agreed on. These were the need for flexible regulatory systems that allow for technology development while protecting users, the need to make it easier for non-personal data to flow across borders, and the need for minimal global rules for data transfers.
In addition, a future global system of data governance must strike a balance between public and private value creation in the digital economy (the idea of a social contract for data that sets out a bundle of rights) and establish ex-ante requirements for transparency.
Access to data and security
Timely and efficient access to data for security and digital evidence remains a challenge. The traditional methods of accessing digital evidence through mutual legal assistance treaties are ineffective. New considerations related to facial recognition technology, AI, and the protection of human rights must be embedded in the mechanisms for access to data for security. Additionally, data that needs to be accessed for security and digital evidence is often in the hands of private companies.
The open-source intelligence (OSINT) tools struggle to legally identify the extent to which non-open source data, such as data purchased from private companies, should form part of OSINT tools.
To continue the work on common principles of trustworthy data flows, it is necessary to create an interoperable and efficient legal framework that protects the rights of individuals, such as the rights to privacy and due process, and establish transparency mechanisms and human rights impact assessments related to new technologies.
Online safety regulation
Another area that would greatly benefit from baseline principles in regulatory regimes is online safety and platform regulation. While the value of such baseline principles is not disputed, regulators struggle with the implementation and enforcement of existing rules and businesses navigating the diverse landscape. New cooperation by the regulators themselves across jurisdictions and embedding safety standards during the design of platforms and apps may be the way forward.
Charting a path towards a safer, rights-based internet
Part of the discussion on making the internet inclusive focuses on ensuring that the online space is safe and secure for everyone while simultaneously upholding and protecting people’s human rights.
Privacy and security are often pitted against each other. But that’s a false binary, experts warn. The two are mutually reinforcing, and one cannot meaningfully exist without the other. So, for instance, users who rely on encrypted communications to keep safe (not only online but also in the physical world) shouldn’t be put at risk through backdoor access. There are other ways of identifying perpetrators, preventing crime, and keeping people safe, and it’s through respect for human rights that the internet can become safer and more connected.
Gender-based violence: Online and offline impacts
Gender-based violence is particularly worrisome, in some regions experiencing a surge. While this is not a new problem, digital technology has amplified abusive behaviour – such as hate speech and other more violent behaviour – against women and girls, and other gender identities. Online violence has an offline impact, and vice versa.
NGOs, the private sector, and governments are taking on the fight against online abuse as well as their resources permit. Stronger enforcement, local solutions addressing local contexts, and more funding for civil society would make a more significant difference. We also need more efforts to identify and eliminate bias in the data and algorithms used for AI systems.
Children and technology: Limiting the risk
Protecting children and young people – who make up almost one-third of the internet population in many countries – from harm is among stakeholders’ top priorities. Two main concerns, data protection in online learning and sexual imagery, were tackled during this IGF.
At the outset of the COVID-19 pandemic, governments and educators rushed to introduce online platforms to keep children engaged in learning. Some of the platforms used data practices that were deemed harmful to children’s rights, in most cases without the consent and knowledge of their parents and guardians. If online educational platforms are to remain the norm, experts suggest that these platforms be audited to determine how children’s data is being gathered, processed, and stored.
With more children and young people spending time online, not least due to the pandemic, the amount of self-generated sexual imagery circulating online is also increasing. Although not all of it is the result of abuse and coercion, content voluntarily generated by kids can still be misused. Experts have therefore argued for more user-friendly material to explain to children and adolescents the repercussions of their risky behaviour.
ITU estimates that approximately 5.3 billion people will use the internet in 2022. This represents an increase of 24% compared to 2019.
Despite a considerable rise in internet penetration over the last four years, participants acknowledged that to make a real difference in people’s lives, internet access needs to comply with sufficient standards – including affordability, inclusivity, sustainability, and links to human capacity development. If policymakers focus only on improving the single metric of basic connectivity, efforts to improve internet access and use for all will fall short, and the digital divide will continue to widen.
A whole-of-society response to the lack of connectivity and other challenges of the digital age was highlighted.
Improvement in connectivity could be achieved through public and private partnerships, local access provision through community networks, using universal service/access funds in financing access, infrastructure sharing, and decentralised approaches to infrastructure development.
Proposed alternative ways of connecting the unconnected include Australia’s Stand programme, a disaster satellite service funded by the government to strengthen telecommunications. Such combined efforts are needed, especially in Africa, to expand its terrestrial and extra-terrestrial internet coverage, to address emergency alerts and communications.
It is paramount that policymakers recognise the value of small operators, such as community networks, and formulate timely policies to assist them. Relying on community networks as a backup for essential infrastructure was also highlighted, especially during crises and natural disasters.
The role of communities of practice was noted in another session, emphasising that they can ensure a stronger representation of African interests in global digital discussions. Substantial African diaspora communities, especially at universities worldwide, are seen as a great asset in strengthening African representation and promoting African interests.
Access has also been discussed in the context of internet shutdowns. A session dedicated to the growing number of internet shutdowns worldwide presented OPTIMA, an online library containing national internet shutdown need assessment reports. Documentation of the consequences of shutdowns is a significant resource helping raise awareness and enhance capacity development, especially when there is a lack of technical training.
Ensuring equitable access to digital healthcare
Another issue prominent on the IGF’s agenda on Day 4 was telemedicine and fairer access to internet health. The discussion built on two years of experience charting a way forward for the future of digital health.
A new research paper, Online health indicators in LAC: Access to safe and affordable health solutions using the internet was introduced as a backdrop for a discussion. focusing on data collection around two axes: access and quality of medicines, and digital health information. The study establishes a methodology for evaluating health solutions using the internet across Latin America and the Caribbean.
Although a growing number of countries have recently adopted laws to regulate telemedicine, it is still a grey area in many countries. Regulating the importation of medicines via the internet can also be crucial, since the availability of medicines can be higher and the prices lower online. There are numerous cases where the price of certain medicines is much lower in neighbouring countries. For instance, in some countries in Latin America the disparity of prices for the same medicine is estimated to be up to 171%.
With the spike in the number of digital healthcare providers and digital well-being apps, challenges abound because not all tools and services are of uniform quality. These are rarely evaluated for effectiveness and trustworthiness. Thus, an effort is needed to institutionalise digital health in the existing health system, provide suitable cybersecurity measures to resolve safety and privacy concerns, and ensure special provisions to guarantee accessibility for people with disabilities. Finally, promoting digital health literacy so that people can participate meaningfully is still weak but still indispensable.
Fighting untruths, such as online misinformation and disinformation, was one of the main sociocultural concerns brought up in discussions. Some of the approaches suggested were: a pre-bunking approach to fighting misinformation, promoting quality information that complies with good journalistic practices and the design and implementation of digital literacy programmes to fight disinformation. It was, however, noted that if the recipients of such programmes cannot read or write, digital media training seems like an unrealistic approach to tackle this issue.
One way of monitoring content is through platform regulation. Regulation of digital platforms should not be driven by particular interest groups, but rather guarantee basic human rights. Regulations that include mechanisms of control and accountability should be built to develop legal frameworks that protect citizens.
A core focus area for regulators is transparency. To achieve meaningful transparency and accountability in terms of content moderation requires inter alia timely audits and evaluations of platforms by third parties, advocacy and monitoring by civil society, the use of knowledge brokers to interpret technical information for regulators and consumer awareness of their digital rights and responsibilities.
In times of crisis, it’s even more important to stick to rules everyone agrees on to manage content and platforms. A major contribution in this regard is the Declaration of principles for content and platform governance in times of crisis launched by AccessNow during IGF 2022. The presentation recognised the challenge of ad hoc responses when a crisis escalates or when there is ongoing public and political pressure on platforms to react.
Towards universal internet principles
What are the core principles of the internet that we should focus on preserving? Some that were listed during this IGF were the rule of law, fairness, and accountability (for both the public sector and companies); multistakeholder governance (including in policy making); openness and transparency in decision-making processes; a human-centric approach (i.e. prioritising the needs of users and serving individuals); the public interest; engaging young people in policy-making; and trustworthiness, reliability, and inclusivity.
One of the most recent initiatives outlining internet principles is the Declaration for the Future of the Internet (DFI), which outlines basic principles on how nation states should act in relation to the internet.
A debate sparked between the representatives of countries that have signed the declaration and those that have not. There are several reasons why countries might decide not to join the declaration – refraining from signing a document that one did not negotiate was cited the most.
While state-focused, the declaration still strongly supports multistakeholderism – it maintains that multistakeholder approaches are needed to translate the principles into concrete and enforceable actions. The declaration says that civil society, the private sector, the technical community, academia, and other interested parties have a role to play in encouraging more states to follow these principles and holding states accountable for them. However, some argue that we might need to refine the multistakeholder model to ensure a proportional representation of both small and underrepresented groups and larger and stronger actors.
Reassessing stakeholders’ roles in IG
Participants assessed governments’ role in internet governance and noted that more policy innovations are needed. The UN GDC should be a valuable avenue to address the role of governments.
There have also been calls to expand the scope of youth participation in internet governance. For instance, the session Global youth engagement in IG: Successes and opportunities addressed the manifold challenges youth encounter, such as limited space for participation in IG decision-making at the national level, gender stereotyping, and accessing content in languages other than English. Fostering young people’s sustained participation in IG will require decision-makers to remove these and other obstacles, and actively listen to unexpected ideas.
Moreover, it is essential to create spaces for different stakeholders to meet together on a permanent basis. The IGF is a longstanding, successful example of an open, impartial, and bottom-up multistakeholder process. Participants stressed that awareness of global and national IGFs on national levels needs to be actively stimulated starting at IGF 2022.
This data analysis is based on 188 session transcripts with 1,851,317 words (approximately 3,702 pages), which is 2.89 times more than the complete works of William Shakespeare.
Below we provide a detailed analysis of prominent digital policy prefixes as well as other related concepts that shared the stage at IGF 2022.
Country mentions
You can find the prominence of different countries by counting the number of references to a country or a city belonging to the country. By clicking on a particular country, you will be able to see the number of mentions of the country in the IGF sessions.
Prefix analysis
Digital remained the most used term with a total of 5,346 references, which is nearly a 77 percent increase in frequency compared to 2021 and over a hundred percent increase compared to 2020. The use of other prefixes followed a similar pattern in comparison to the previous two years.
Online and cyber took second and third place respectively, with 3,010 and 1,789 mentions. The word tech came in fourth place, which is a significant decrease in comparison to 2021, when it held the second spot. Finally, virtual remained in fifth place, accounting for slightly more than 2 percent of the total number of analysed prefixes.
Frequent words and concepts
Digital Compact was another prominent [phrase or word chunk] at this year’s IGF. It was mentioned 308 times. Other prominent word chunks include fragmentation and AI governance, ITU, and metaverse, to name a few. A comprehensive list of popular word chunks is available below.
Art@IGF
Art@IGF combines digital governance, art and technology to give new insights on the digital challenges of our time. The IGF 2022 virtual exhibition featured two sci-fi exhibitions: AI governance & AfroFuturism.
AI governance
AfroFuturism and sci-fi
Diplo @ IGF
Diplo and Geneva Internet Platform @ IGF
25-26 November 2022
Training for African parliamentarians (co-organised by Diplo)
28 November 2022
Briefing for Francophonie participants at the IGF (presentation by Jovan Kurbalija)
29 November 2022
Fragmented reality. New horizons of digital distrust (participation by Jovan Kurbalija)
29 November 2022
Digital self-determination: a pillar of digital democracy (participation by Marilia Maciel)
29 November 2022
Reassessing government role in IG: How to embrace Leviathan (participation by Jovan Kurbalija)
1 December 2022
Strengthening African voices in global digital policy (hosted by Diplo)
1 December 2022
Parliamentary session 3: Unpacking UN process (participation by Vladimir Radunovic and Sorina Teleanu)
2 December 2022
Protect the digital rights and data security for the elderly (participation by Jovan Kurbalija)
Strengthening African voices in global digital policy
Are African voices heard in global digital policy? The short answer would be not as much as they should. This is the summary of the findings of the recently published report Stronger digital voices from Africa: Building African digital foreign policy and diplomacy presented during the workshop. The report, published by Diplo, provides a snapshot of Africa’s digital diplomacy, drawing on lessons learned, good practices from Africa and beyond, and some of the underlying challenges to be addressed through whole of government and whole of society approaches.
The study shows that African countries are not really lagging behind more developed countries in formulating a digital foreign policy, as only a few countries worldwide have already launched comprehensive digital foreign policy strategies. Elements of digital foreign policy can also be found in the national strategies and policies of African countries and continental and regional organisations focusing on specific digital policy issues – from connectivity and cybersecurity to capacity development.
Africa finds itself amid the so-called digital cold war in the making, stemming from aggressive tech competition between large/powerful countries (like China and the USA), shaping the environment in which Africa contributes to global digital policy. Africa, therefore, has to position itself to maximise its development potential and avoid risks. To address these challenges and maximise its potential, African countries need a holistic approach to activate all possible resources to represent their digital interests.
The lack of buy-in from African policymakers for digital transformation and technology must also be addressed. Buy-in could be nurtured via the initiatives such as the African Parliamentary Network on Internet Governance (APNIG).
Our image of the day – Negotiating with AI – builds on some of the discussions on AI advancements and our (digital) future that have taken place at the IGF over the past few days. Will we manage to create a human-centred AI and digital future? Will we strike a viable deal with technology?
Approaches, arguments, and analysis continue developing around the main themes of the IGF, ranging from AI governance and cybersecurity, to internet fragmentation and digital developments, among others.
In this issue of the IGF Daily, you can visit an online exhibition of AfroFuturism that combines African traditional motives with sci-fiction and technology. You can also try to solve the IGF Crossword Puzzle on digital developments and internet governance.
Have you heard something new during the discussions, but we’ve missed it? Send us your suggestions at digitalwatch@diplomacy.edu
Issues Discussed
Internet fragmentation
The term splinternet emerged in discussions on internet fragmentation. The session on balancing digital sovereignty and the splinternet focused on the impact of these processes on the internet infrastructure. So far, there have not been significant open pushes for major changes to the core internet protocol (TCP/IP). If an alternative to the current internet protocol is introduced and widely adopted, it would signal a major shift that would mark the end of the current global internet and lead to the emergence of new, parallel architectures.
Internet fragmentation could also be triggered, to some extent, by regulations related to cybersecurity and content policy, if such regulations create national rules obligations that are incompatible with the global nature of critical internet resources.
The risks of internet fragmentation are most likely to arise in controversies about content and data. The filtering and blocking of certain content in some jurisdictions, as well as different approaches to data sovereignty, will increase the risk of weakening the global internet.
Governance of artificial intelligence
Day 3 discussion on AI focused on two aspects: the role of AI in the Global South and AI certification.
Three sessions tackled AI in the Global South. Designing an AI ethical framework in the Global South brought into focus AI regulatory initiatives in Brazil, China, and Chile. Africa is lagging behind when it comes to the development of AI policies and regulations, with some notable exceptions, such as Mauritius’ national AI strategy. A potential build-up towards regulating the protection of personal data as one of the main sources for AI development is the AU’s Malabo Convention. This regional instrument requires one more ratification to enter into force. An example of a successful public campaign on Net Neutrality in India in 2015 was mentioned as an inspiration for grassroots campaigns in the Global South on the questions of AI governance.
Beyond regulatory issues, the development of AI technologies in Africa has been taking off. There are examples of homegrown AI technologies for cater to the 92 languages spoken in Ethiopia. But when it comes to AI systems developed by big tech companies, societies in the Global South are concerned about the risk of biased data and a lack of understanding of the ethical and cultural context in which these AI systems are deployed.
Discussion in the session Global AI governance for sustainable development argued that the potential AI-driven growth of productivity and the economy is not equivalent to sustainable development. Moreover, the benefits from AI won’t be fairly shared with developing countries, which will most likely experience a negative impact through the loss of jobs as industrial production becomes automated by AI.
Another problem is that most current AI development focuses on very specific sectors, such as agriculture, transport, or water systems. However, very little attention is paid to the holistic impact of AI on other sectors of society or, for example, jobs and environmental impact.
The session on assurance and certification of emerging digital technologies argued that AI certification is the next step in applying AI ethical principles and policies to the use and deployment of AI platforms. Countries have started establishing AI institutes focusing on building certification programmes for different types of AI systems and other emerging technologies.
This AI Certification system in the making faces many challenges, including the need to keep up with the fast pace of the evolution of technology and the shortage of skilled assessment professionals. As AI technology is deployed worldwide, AI certification should be internationalised to reflect the different ethical, cultural, and societal contexts that AI will impact strongly.
A quality safeguarding mechanism is key to building public confidence and security in emerging technologies. Due to the international nature of most digital service provision, best practices for the assurance and conformity assessment of digital services depend on global and regional cooperation.
A capacity development approach connecting industries and educational institutions ensures that there is no supply-demand mismatch. It was also noted that workforce development strategies should be country-specific. The need for cybersecurity personnel varies depending on the country’s industrialisation and digitalisation levels. Text
What we often neglect when a cyberattack occurs is its societal harm and impact. There is an increasing need to develop a harm methodology with quantitative and qualitative indicators to document the harm of cyberattacks on people, communities, and societies.
We need a taxonomy of cyber harm where all stakeholders can contribute to inform the next steps in developing effective legislation, push the private sector to increase security standards, and inform civil society how to help victims. Measuring harm needs to be part of a bigger project with all parties involved where silos are broken: governments introducing new legislation, the private sector creating new security standards, and civil society supporting victims.
Day 3 discussions also touched on the role of parliaments in addressing cyberattacks, and noted how parliamentarians can act as the link between high-level conversations with other stakeholders involved in addressing cyber threats. Concerning the role of other stakeholders, civil society can collaborate with parliaments to ensure accountability and oversight. Civil society and the private sector were encouraged to see parliamentarians as a link to get their voices heard.
Mythbusting at the IGF
The Best Practice Forum on Cybersecurity notes five myths about the key policy differences between cybersecurity and cybercrime from a human rights-centric approach to internet governance.
Myth 1: They are two sides of the same coin: Cybersecurity policy is proactive and cybercrime policy is reactive.
Myth 2: Considerations for human rights are not compatible with cybercrime and cybersecurity policy.
Myth 3: The security of information is a consideration for both cybercrime and cybersecurity. (It’s controversial!)
There’s so much more to meaningful connectivity than only internet access. Access to the internet won’t mean much if a user’s device is outdated or if a regular subscription is prohibitively expensive. Users who don’t speak English – widely considered the internet’s lingua franca – won’t find much value in an internet which rarely speaks their language.
Meaningful connectivity, which refers to all those aspects that users require to experience the internet in a valuable and empowering way, was a major reference point for today’s main session on connectivity and human rights.
Solutions are several; among the most reiterated is the need to narrow – or close – the digital divide. Concerning people with a disability, there’s a need for stronger awareness of the need to develop products and services that are fully inclusive.
The main session set the scene for other discussions on human rights, such as ensuring that online spaces are safe and inclusive while at the same time upholding and protecting people’s human rights.
Connectivity, safety, and free speech are all protected by international human rights principles and systems. Yet, there’s a significant gap in the implementation of these laws. For instance, internet shutdowns don’t happen without context. They happen just before elections, amid conflicts, when people are protesting on the streets, etc. The solution is to uphold human rights. It’s through respect for human rights that the internet can become safer and more connected.
It’s time to re-assess the legality, necessity, and proportionality of the measures and technology introduced to fight the pandemic and to recognise the lessons learned to ensure. In this way, governments, businesses, civil society, and the entire world, will be better prepared for the next global emergency.
Internet users who fear for their safety, including human rights defenders and vulnerable communities, often depend on encrypted communications. Encryption can keep people safe not only online but in the physical world. So how do we reconcile users’ need to use encryption to protect themselves with law enforcement’s need to access communications as part of investigations?
If we’re pitting privacy and security against each other, that’s a false binary, experts warn. The two are mutually reinforcing, and one cannot meaningfully exist without the other. If a platform introduces the slightest possibility of circumventing encryption, it loses both its security and its privacy features. They say there are other ways of identifying perpetrators, preventing crime, and keeping people safe.
Regulatory harmonisation
Data that flows freely across borders can foster innovation, competitiveness, and economic growth. But it also brings challenges, for instance, in terms of personal data protection or the protection of national economic interests. Discussing balances and trade-offs between digital sovereignty and the harmonisation of regulatory approaches and between business interests and human rights protection, the session on whether to regulate or not to regulate digital spaces pointed out several issues that need to be considered:
Countries do not have the same starting point when it comes to data regulation and developing countries are often put at a disadvantage.
There is a need for agile regulatory systems to allow for rapid technology development while providing consumer protection.
Active public participation is indispensable to achieving effective regulatory frameworks.
Another challenge related to data flows is access to digital evidence. Crime investigators and prosecutors depend on access to data that is frequently located in other jurisdictions or requires the involvement of private actors.
However, crime investigation is still primarily a national activity, with non-agile mechanisms for processing data evidence requests from other countries. Traditional mutual legal assistance treaties (MLATs) were designed with sovereignty at the forefront and do not fare well in situations where the only foreign element in the investigation is data location.
Countries are putting legal solutions to this issue in place, in many cases with unknown extraterritorial effects and insufficient interoperability mechanisms. Those countries that do not have legal frameworks for cross-border digital evidence usually resort to data localisation restrictions.
The solution to this issue should be an interoperable and efficient legal framework that protects the rights of individuals, such as the rights to privacy and due process.
Whole of society approaches to connecting the unconnected
Like the day before, the Day 3 sessions on development issues addressed connectivity gaps and proposed alternative ways of connecting disadvantaged communities. The Internet Backpack project was presented as a complementary alternative, capable of providing sustainable connectivity on 95% of the Earth’s territory.
Spectrum allocation is seen as an essential element in promoting connectivity. However, the mobile telecoms provider sector usually comprises only a few players and in rural communities, little or no spectrum segmentation is available to serve small internet providers.
It is, therefore, necessary to ensure that policymakers recognise the value of small operators, such as community networks, and formulate timely policies to assist them. An infrastructure built by the community itself should not be seen as competing with big telecommunications operators but as benefiting the community. For example, in Ghana, the National IT Agency manages its spectrum allocations through so-called Enhanced Community Centres, digital hubs that provide last-mile connectivity without charge to villages.
Policymakers and regulators are encouraged to look outside traditional regulatory frameworks to avoid the exclusion of marginalised groups, concluded the session on Policy network: Meaningful access.
Whole of society responses to the lack of connectivity and other challenges of the digital age were highlighted in the session on Strengthening African voices in global digital policy. The role of communities of practice was noted, emphasising that they can ensure a stronger representation of African interests in global digital discussions.
While training is essential as a starting point, sustainable impact is created through institutions within the African Union and regional economic communities, national governments, and universities. Strong African diaspora communities, especially at universities worldwide, are seen as untapped potential.
Towards universal internet principles?
Discussed on Day 3 as well, the Declaration for the Future of the Internet (DFI) sparked another debate between the representatives of countries that have signed the declaration and those that have not. There are several reasons why countries might decide not to join the declaration – refraining from signing a document that one did not negotiate was cited the most.
Initiators of the declaration underlined that the DFI was conceived as a shared positive vision for the future of the internet to counteract a rising trend of digital authoritarianism. The declaration says that civil society, the private sector, the technical community, academia, and other interested parties have a role to play in getting more states to follow these principles and holding states accountable for them.
In times of crisis, it’s even more important to stick to rules that everyone agrees on for how to run content and platforms. A major contribution in this regard is the Declaration of principles for content and platform governance in times of crisis launched by AccessNow during the IGF 2022. The session recognised the challenge of ad hoc responses when a crisis escalates or when there is ongoing public and political pressure on platforms to react.
Strengthening African voices in global digital policy
Diplo at the IGF
Diplo’s Africa coordinator Mwende Njiraini moderating the panel.
Are African voices heard in global digital policy? The short answer would be not as much as they should. This is the summary of the findings of the recently published report Stronger digital voices from Africa: Building African digital foreign policy and diplomacy presented during the workshop. The report, published by Diplo, provides a snapshot of Africa’s digital diplomacy, drawing on lessons learned, good practices from Africa and beyond, and some of the underlying challenges to be addressed through whole of government and whole of society approaches.
The study shows that African countries are not really lagging behind more developed countries in formulating a digital foreign policy, as only a few countries worldwide have already launched comprehensive digital foreign policy strategies. Elements of digital foreign policy can also be found in the national strategies and policies of African countries and continental and regional organisations focusing on specific digital policy issues – from connectivity and cybersecurity to capacity development.
Africa finds itself amid the so-called digital cold war in the making, stemming from aggressive tech competition between large/powerful countries (like China and the USA), shaping the environment in which Africa contributes to global digital policy. Africa, therefore, has to position itself to maximise its development potential and avoid risks. To address these challenges and maximise its potential, African countries need a holistic approach to activate all possible resources to represent their digital interests.
The lack of buy-in from African policymakers for digital transformation and technology must also be addressed. Buy-in could be nurtured via the initiatives such as the African Parliamentary Network on Internet Governance (APNIG).
AfroFuturism and AfricanFuturism explore the intersection between African culture, history, and science fiction.
AfroFuturistim samples past images and the sentiments, memories, and ideas around them and combines them with new visualisations in a way that the current generation can identify.
AfroFuturism relies heavily on African culture, history, and mythology by anchoring them in future sci-fi perspectives.
This is a small exhibition of works developed by Diplo’s chief illustrator Prof. Vlada Veljasevic, inspired by AfroFuturism themes.
If you are reading this daily summary while taking your morning coffee – in Ethiopia (known for its coffee production tradition) or anywhere else in the world – you might also explore the history of coffee.
Legend says that Kaldi, a goat herder from Ethiopia, discovered coffee’s unique effects when he saw that his goats became very active after eating coffee beans. He reported it to the local monastery, whose priests stay awake for long hours of evening prayers after drinking coffee. Coffee rituals spread worldwide.
Africa’s challenges with internet connectivity are not new. The exorbitant cost of owning a mobile phone and maintaining an internet connection are still prohibitive for many households. Incentives are still too few for the private sector to invest in connecting rural communities. Patchy and erratic electricity supplies mean that large numbers of users cannot connect to the internet for indeterminable lengths of time.
The session dedicated to connectivity and digital rights – a view from the Global South, however, shone a bright light on the increasing number of efforts by African actors determined to make a real difference. As one African parliamentarian said, ‘It is only us who can fix our nation… We will be the driver to get us where we need to be … a second submarine cable, a data centre…’.
The path to internet inclusion is through: developing content in local languages; adopting inclusive measures that embrace women and girls in ICT; teaching users about rights and responsibilities in language they can understand.
Alternative ways of being connected
Who ensures that people are connected in case of a disaster? Is this only the responsibility of the government? Such questions were raised during the session on ‘Connectivity at the critical time: During and after crises’. It was argued that civil society and the private sector should step in and form partnerships with governments. Australia’s Stand Program, a disaster satellite service funded by the government to strengthen telecommunications, is a good example. Such combined efforts are needed, especially in Africa, to expand its terrestrial and extra-terrestrial internet coverage, to address emergency alerts and communications.
There were also calls to rely on community networks as a backup for essential infrastructure.
One strategy to promote meaningful access to telecommunications services, as outlined in the session on the ‘Lessons learned from capacity building in the Global South’ is the national schools of community networks. Launched in 2020, with support from the UK Foreign Commonwealth and Development Office (FCDO) the schools will offer a capacity-building foundation in different countries, such as Brazil, Kenya, Nigeria, South Africa, and Indonesia, to enable them to deploy and maintain community networks.
Communities and citizens also need training on how and to what extent resources can be used in a time of disaster. According to an assessment conducted by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), only 29% of countries have such a national emergency communication plan in place, and most of them are high-income countries. The government and people in each country should work together to plan how to communicate in case of an emergency.
An interplanetary network is technically ready to be applied into outer space, following testing in the low-latency environment of planet Earth. As technology is deployed via a growing number of satellite programmes, there is an increasing number of security and regulatory issues.
The launch of LEO satellite constellations by companies like Amazon, SpaceX, Telesat, and OneWeb helps people in remote and rural places get online. But it also opens new governance and regulatory issues in areas such as broadband provision, spectrum allocation, and the applicability of space law.
Because the use of satellites necessitates national licensing, but service providers operate across national borders, achieving some level of harmonisation among applicable regulations is an additional challenge.
The metaverse was the focus of two sessions: Misty metaverse: blurring letter of the law and Joint efforts to build a responsible & sustainable metaverse. Both sessions were framed around the typical discourse that accompanies new technologies: outlining the benefits and risks of the metaverse. But there was also something new: a call for a Web 2.5 approach to building the metaverse, which would have centralised governance and decentralised operations. This was proposed as a solution to the immature state of metaverse technology.
Despite the media hype surrounding Web 3.0 earlier this year, it is interesting to note that it was not present in the IGF debate as much as one might have expected. So far, Web 3.0 was mentioned only once. A possible reason for this ‘de-hype’ is a loss of enthusiasm for blockchain – the underlying technology behind Web 3.0 – due to the Bitcoin crisis.
AI remained on the agenda during the IGF’s second day. During the session on Afro-feminist AI governance; challenges and lessons panelists made parallel between gender inequality and Africa and digitaliation around issues of: lack of data, access to digital devices, digital illiteracy, and inequalities in the data economy.
During the session on pathways to equitable and safe development of artificial general intelligence (AGI) participants argued that intelligent devices that collect data that may feed a future AGI are mostly controlled by Global North, even when they are used in the Global South. In addition, the profit-driven approach of tech companies will exclude the interests of marginalised communities that are based in developing countries. Although the problem of AI-driven divide won’t be easily solved, participants argued that user-centered and public-driven AI development could help.
Internet fragmentation
On the second day, internet fragmentation continued to top the IGF agenda as the theme of a main session and a policy network debate. Internet fragmentation was also addressed during a session on economic sanctions.
Out of many possible angles, there was an emerging consensus that internet fragmentation should be identified by user experience. If users cannot access online services – for instance, because of their geographic location – it means the internet is fragmented.
The reasons for internet fragmentation could be multifold, including:
Technical fragmentation of interoperable standards and protocols. The internet will cease to exist if the connectivity layer with TCP/IP is endangered. In addition, user access to internet services can be fragmented through the use of certificates, especially those dealing with security.
Confusion between decentralisation and fragmentation of the internet.
Human rights violations, as separate from internet fragmentation.
Content filtering.
Fighting cybercrime and misuse of the internet, increasingly used as a justification for restricting access to internet services.
The discussion in the main session on governing data and protecting privacy took a birds-eye view of the state of global data governance, privacy protection legislation, and the main challenges to effective privacy protection in current legal environments. The speakers pointed out several issues that influence data governance and privacy protection:
The global data governance landscape is highly fragmented. Such fragmentation reduces opportunities for collaboration among jurisdictions.
Many developing countries are concerned that they will become major providers of raw data to global platforms while having to rely on foreign knowledge that is produced from that data.
Data protection legislation and free flow of data are not mutually exclusive, rather data protection legislation increases the security of data flows.
Data governance policies should be developed with input from the multistakeholder community who understands not only the abstract legal debates around privacy, but also the real world challenges of implementing effective data privacy solutions.
There is a gap between the data protection and privacy legislation on paper and the implementation of existing rules. Most countries need to strengthen their institutional capacity to enforce data protection laws and accountability.
The question of whether a universal binding treaty on data governance is possible was brought up, with differing opinions.
Taking a more detailed look, the session on data integration for security dealt with technologies using biometric data to combat cross-border crime, migration control, the use of facial recognition in public spaces, and the related infringement of human rights (right to privacy) of individuals.
It was noted that while the new technologies are efficient in combating crime, their effective implementation has to include transparency mechanisms, impact assessments, and privacy guidelines. This approach would contribute to accountability and trust in security technologies, making their use more powerful.
The IGF is seen as a particularly relevant forum for addressing the role and responsibility of such international technology transfers.
As for open-source intelligence (OSINT) tools (databases of publicly available data that intelligence communities use to collate information of value to their work), the main legal challenge is the extent to which non-open source data, such as data purchased from private companies, should form part of OSINT tools. It is ethically questionable, even if legally permitted, whether private companies should give access to their data to intelligence communities and organisations.
The balance between government regulation, human rights, and creating a trusted environment was also discussed in the context of data flows and building common principles on a global level. A multilateral approach was deemed necessary to maintain a trusted free flow of data, resolve jurisdictional conflicts, and adopt common global principles of data protection.
While certain types of online content have a clear designation as illegal across jurisdictions (child sexual abuse content, terrorism, or extremism), there are new types of rapidly-emerging content that are harmful, but not yet designated as such by legislators (self-harm, eating disorders, disinformation, polarisation).
The regulators need flexibility and agility to address the online implications of these harms. Beyond regulation, it is also important to embed safety standards in the design stage of platforms and apps.
Dark patterns
Imagine you’re browsing an online store, and you spot something you like. A pop-up urges you to complete your purchase within 2 hours – or the price you’re about to pay will increase. That’s called pressure selling and is classified as an advertising practice that can skew your decision. It’s just one of several techniques that advertisers use to influence consumer behaviour. Techniques that subvert or impair consumer autonomy, decision-making, or choice are known as dark commercial patterns.
Speakers engaged in a dedicated session on dark patterns spoke about the difficulty in determining when advertising techniques cross the threshold of what is ethical and fair, and referred to the work the OECD, the EU, and consumer protection authorities in different countries are undertaking to address these issues.
Regulating dark commercial patterns is even more difficult: The techniques are constantly changing, so the way we defined them a few years ago might already be outdated today. How do we regulate a practice that changes even as we watch? And who’s responsible for the ensuing harm to consumers? Is it the online store that’s using such techniques, is it the developer of the interface – or both?
To tackle the issues and limit consumer harm, enforcement authorities might need to access the algorithms behind the advertising, which is an uphill battle considering that companies look at algorithms as trade secrets. The key could lie in stronger consumer awareness: It won’t stop businesses from using persuasive techniques, but it could help prevent consumers from falling into the trap.
The future of IG: rethinking multistakeholderism and strengthening youth engagement
Born in response to alarming state behaviour online, as well as internet fragmentation challenges, the Declaration for the Future of the Internet outlines basic principles on how nation states should act in relation to the internet.
This Day 2 session focusing entirely on this document noted that the declaration strongly supports multistakeholderism and maintained that multistakeholder approaches are needed to ensure that the internet’s full peace-building and other potential is used. However, some argue that we might need to rethink the multistakeholder model to ensure a proportional representation of both small and underrepresented groups and larger and stronger actors.
During the main session on the dynamic coalition, the perennial question was raised if the IGF should produce more concrete outcomes in the form of policy recommendations. Some argue that such recommendations should be galvainsied through the work of dynamic coalitions. In this way, the IGF can become a policy incubator.
There have also been calls to expand the scope of youth participation in internet governance (IG). For instance, the session ‘Global youth engagement in IG: Successes and opportunities’ addressed the manifold challenges youth encounter, such as limited space for participation in IG decision-making at the national level, gender stereotyping, and the challenges of accessing content in languages other than English.
Decision-makers need to remove these and other barriers and instead build structures that can support youth for long-term engagement in IG.
THE IGF DAY IN GRAPHS
Today we analysed texts from all main sessions, workshops and policy networks, summing up to approximately 274.008 words, or 1.572.192 characters into the following 4 graphs:
As in the previous 8 years, we have a team of rapporteurs following most of the sessions and providing just-in-time reports from the Internet Governance Forum (IGF). Starting today, we are also publishing IGF Dailies, looking back at what happened the day before, but with a twist: Instead of summarising all the sessions, we are highlighting only what is new.
Think about it this way: Instead of saying that the discussions underscored the importance of bridging the digital divide once and for all, we will tell you if new solutions are proposed on how to get there. Our IGF dailies will also be enriched by data analyses and illustrations.
Have you heard something new during the discussions, but we’ve missed it? Send us your suggestions at digitalwatch@diplomacy.edu.
Digital Watch team
Setting the tone
The 17th Internet Governance Forum (IGF) was officially opened on 29 November 2022 under the theme ‘Resilient internet for a shared sustainable and common future’. This overarching topic and its five themes, aligned with the UN Secretary-General’s envisioned Global Digital Compact, echoed throughout the opening speeches and the high-level panel that followed.
While the speakers saw the internet and digital technologies as accelerators for digital transformation and a springboard for the SDGs, they underlined the need for a human-centred and human rights approach to the digital future. Resilient digital infrastructure, interoperability, harmonisation of regulations, connectivity, affordability, and relevant content were mentioned as priorities for building an inclusive digital future. Challenges remain in identifying the boundaries of digital transformation and executing, implementing, and deploying digital transformation.
The dark side of the internet – including deadly disinformation, online bullying, and challenges to freedom of expression, among others – needs to be tackled if we are to forge a digital future where access to fast, safe, inclusive, and affordable internet is a given, not a privilege.
Speakers also reflected on the role of IGF and its contribution to the Global Digital Compact. The IGF is seen as a convener and a connector, creating a high-level playing field for sharing policy solutions, best practices, and experiences for identifying emerging issues. Discussants underscored that the value of the IGF is in its multistakeholder model. The role of the IGF Leadership Panel was highlighted as well.
Some speakers, however, called upon the IGF to up its game and produce more than just reflections. The IGF, they say, should put forward tangible proposals, whether for shaping global norms and standards, informing national-level regulations, connecting citizens with their governments, contributing to the Global Digital Compact, or contributing to the UN Summit for the Future in September 2024.
A High-Level Leaders Track discussion on digital trust and security drew parallels between digital transformation, security, and climate change.
The main challenge was finding a baseline for trust among countries while respecting their sovereignty and fostering cooperation. A tough topic on its own, it comes at a time when digital security is under threat: Malicious actors are targeting the critical infrastructures of hospitals, airports, and power grids, with devastating human consequences. The panellists explored this issue from two perspectives: What are the existing barriers to digital trust and security, and what practices are in place that can foster a common understanding on underlying principles of trust and security?
The speakers pointed out the need for trust between different stakeholders – governments, law enforcement, civil society, service providers, and users – to supporting collaboration. A greater challenge lies in fostering trust between states, where the discussion turned to current avenues for exchanging opinions on security on the international level.
Discussing fostering common understanding and meaningful, sustainable cooperation, the speakers agreed that dialogue and stakeholder engagement are the base, but new models of policy design must evolve. Using the examples of the Global Forum on Cyber Expertise (GFCE) and the NATO Centre of Excellence for Cybersecurity, the speakers reflected on inclusive participation in digital security discussions.
Turning to climate change and the role of digital technologies in supporting developing countries, the speakers highlighted the need to improve access to technologies, technology exchanges, and global value chains. The speakers underlined the importance of open data and open science, including UNESCO’s Recommendation on Open Science.
Will UN Digital Compact re-energise internet governance?
The UN Digital Compact was mentioned 44 times during the first day of the IGF, indicating its high relevance. The compact could provide a fresh breeze in the internet governance space. The IGF started losing steam during the pandemic years. At the same time, there are more and more issues that require governance solutions. The positions of actors have shifted as governments gain confidence as providers of public goods and technology companies seek more stable and regulated operational spaces.
The compact can help revisit old IG narratives and introduce new framing of critical digital issues. It can be particularly useful in overcoming policy silos by promoting cross-cutting coverage of issues such as cybersecurity, AI, and data governance.
The IGF 2022’s discussions in Addis Ababa will be fed into the compact consultations. Once it is adopted, the compact could also reshape the role of the IGF. At a time when new multilateral agreements are difficult to achieve, the existing policy spaces such as IGF – with a mandate endorsed by the UN – have even higher importance.
Thus, the future of digital governance, especially ahead of the decisive 2025, could be shaped at the nexus between the new dynamism triggered by the UN Digital Compact and the existing mandate of the IGF.
Two sessions on the first day of the IGF focussed on AI
The session Affective computing: The Governance challenges introduced affective computing as a new term on the IGF agenda. This is usually associated with the use of AI to recognise, interpret, and simulate human emotions. It can detect anger, happiness, and excitement. Affective computing is about ‘machines knowing us better than we know ourselves’ as the power of tech platforms is often described.
Affective computing can be used in education, transportation, hiring, entertainment, and even digital love lives. In education, AI can track students’ moods and attention, in policing to discern deception, and in job interviews to determine applicants’ feelings about a company.
Discussion at the IGF demonstrated that affective computing still needs more capability to identify human emotions. Current research shows that emotions are not universal. They are relational, depending on local, cultural, and personal contexts. Emotions are also highly complex, ensembling hundreds of signals, from facial expressions to movements, body postures, choice of words, different abilities, and particular needs. Technology cannot yet capture the intrinsic complexity of emotions.
Affective computing carries bias, as it is trained mainly on images and expressions of people from developed countries. Thus, these technologies carry mainly the emotions of the Global North. Using them in other regions can cause significant damage to populations.
As a way to deal with the problems and risks of AI and affective technologies, new approaches are being developed. Microsoft came up with its 4Cs Ethical Guidelines: communication, consent, calibration, and contingency for affective computing systems. Other soft laws and non-binding guidelines exist, but over the last year, it has become clear that strong regulation is also needed.
AI governance and regulation was the focus of the session Realizing trustworthy AI through stakeholder collaboration examining how to apply the OECD’s AI Principles (2019) to the development of AI platforms. Many discussants argued for AI governance via experimentation and policy sandboxes. This approach can increase transparency, trust, and public support for AI platforms.
Standardisation is another indispensable approach to transform principles such as fairness and transparency into reality.
Professional and policy silos are becoming more problematic in AI than in other digital realms. Even tech companies, developers, engineers, product managers, and data scientists address AI from their own angles. They have even fewer bridges to the policy community and the general public than they do to each other. The OECD principles try to unite the tech and policy sectors’ unique knowledge. Coding competitions and hackathons are events that join specialists from different coding and policy communities on common challenges.
AI and affective computing, in particular, will require a lot of governance innovation to reduce risks and increase trust, transparency and overall inclusion in AI governance.
A Fragmented Internet?
The internet is global in its technical infrastructure but local in its consequences for economies, cultures, and societies, which should be reflected in its governance.
If we deal properly with this global/local interplay, internet fragmentation can be avoided, or at least slowed down.
This session outlined a catalogue of policies and approaches of governments and tech platforms that could lead toward internet fragmentation, including the vulnerability of submarine cables, tech platform policies, and government filtering.
A stronger push towards digital sovereignty as a part of national sovereignty is seen as an accelerator of fragmentation. After realising the importance of digital networks for national stability, especially during a pandemic, more and more countries are extending national sovereignty over digital networks and data.
Increasing fragmentation could lead toward the end of the unified and interoperable internet. The internet core infrastructure is very robust, surviving all challenges, including recent conflicts crossing national borders. Many discussants called for the development of standards to define hate speech, disinformation, objectionable online content, and other issues that could fragment content and data sharing on the internet. More focus on the bottom billion than the next billion could reduce the risks of social fragmentation and new divides triggered by internet policy dilemmas.
Respecting the principles outlined in the UN Charter will also help prevent internet fragmentation. The UN Global Digital Compact could help establish a new consensus on digital governance that would preserve the core technical infrastructure of the internet while providing space for other policies adjusted to regional, national, and cultural specificities.
Universal acceptance fosters the use of web and email addresses in many languages and scripts. If the internet infrastructure can be used in different languages, it will reduce the risk of internet fragmentation.
Universal acceptance is primarily a societal value that should facilitate the inclusion of all internet users.
The growing erosion of digital rights
We start our coverage of human rights-related sessions with a stark reminder that the notion of privacy is eroding among the younger generation. Younger people, who represent up to one-third of the internet population, are growing up with a diluted understanding of what the right to privacy means, and what safeguards they are entitled to.
In the Global South, privacy and data protection rules have been enacted only in recent years, signalling an even stronger need for youth to be educated about human rights from an early age using language they can understand. Behavioural advertising or profiling for targeted advertising shouldn’t treat young users in the same way as adults.
Contributing to this problem is that the development of products and services does not always follow the privacy by design approach. Users shouldn’t have to monitor their privacy settings every time they install a new app. Many legal remedies exist for users who have been victims of data breaches. Their effectiveness largely relies on enforcement and regulatory oversight, which in some countries needs significant improvement.
When it comes to apps, the take-it-or-leave-it approach to signing up for an app or a service in exchange for relinquishing rights to user data should be replaced by a fairer system that gives users the option to limit the type or amount of data the app gathers. Better still, regulators should prohibit companies from gathering more data than they need, even if users might agree to sharing it. Young users, in particular, seldom understand the implications of such a choice.
We’re also reminded of another stark fact: Almost 20,000 webpages containing coerced self-generated child sexual abuse imagery of kids aged 7–10 were discovered in the first six months of 2022, according to data by the Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) released in August 2022. That’s an increase of over 360% compared to the previous year. While coercion is clearly abusive and illegal, there is other content voluntarily generated by kids that may be unwise, and can be misused. While there is much educational material available, governments and service providers need to design and create new, more user-friendly material that has children and adolescents as clear target audiences.
Concerning gender rights online, digital technology has amplified abusive behaviour against women and girls, leading to a spiralling problem of online violence. The measures undertaken by NGOs, the private sector, and governments are taking on the fight against online abuse as well as their resources permit. Stronger enforcement, local solutions addressing local contexts, and more funding for civil society would make a greater difference.
Data flows: Fragmentation vs harmonisation?
The discussion on economic and legal issues started on the first day, full steam ahead, with cross-border data flows. We were reminded that there are different approaches to data flows around the world; in China, India, the USA, the EU and elsewhere, each jurisdiction has; its own priorities and interests it wants to protect (safeguarding privacy, advancing the local economy, protecting (national) security, etc.).
While this regulatory fragmentation comes with challenges to trade and the global digital economy, harmonisation attempts – leaving aside their likelihood of success – run the risk of eliminating national characteristics.
And yet, there seem to be a few areas of agreement among speakers. One IGF session suggested the cross-border flow of non-personal data must be facilitated; that there is a need for minimal global rules for data transfers; and that African countries need to come together to strengthen their position on cross-border data flows.
Fighting untruths, such as online misinformation and disinformation, was the main sociocultural concern across workshops on Day 1.
A pre-bunking approach to fighting misinformation was put forward: In the case of fighting misinformation epidemics, people can be exposed to weakened doses of misinformation or disinformation techniques to develop cognitive antibodies over time, through a process known as psychological inoculation. An underlying challenge, however, is adapting those interventions to different cultural contexts.
Other suggested approaches included promoting quality information that complies with journalistic good practices and the design and implementation of digital literacy programmes to fight disinformation. It was, however, noted that if the recipients of such programmes cannot read or write, digital media training seems like an unrealistic approach to tackle this issue.
Participants also assessed governments’ role in internet governance, and noted that more policy innovations in internet governance are needed. This highlights that existing systems, such as WSIS, designed to foster the participation of governments in internet governance, remain insufficient. The UN Global Digital Compact should be a valuable avenue to address what should be the role of governments.
The day in graphs
Diplo’s AI and Data Lab, the experimental space of Diplo, has processed transcripts from all workshops and main sessions of Day 1 employed the following models:
Bart Large model trained on Multi-Genre Natural Language Inference (MultiNLI) dataset for the task of zero-shot text classification
Roberta Base model trained on english language corpus for the tasks of tagging, parsing, lemmatizing, name-entity recognition
The lab generated the following four graphs, visually summarising yesterday’s (Tuesday’s) discussions. It is no surprise that at a forum about the internet and digital issues, online, internet, and digital are the most frequent words in discussions.
This was surely the case for Day 1, as our graphs below illustrate. What is interesting to note is that data, know, and people also appeared quite often in the debates. This is undoubtedly an illustration of several calls we have been hearing at the IGF and elsewhere more and more often; we list here only three of them:
1. Data is the engine of the digital economy, but also an asset (both personal and economic) that needs adequate protection.
2. Knowledge (or understanding) of how technology works will help us shape better policies and regulations for an inclusive, safe, and secure digital future.
3.We need digital developments to be people-centric and embed adequate protections for human rights and fundamental freedoms. And generated these four graphs, visually summarising the discussions of yesterday:
Our executive director Dr Jovan Kurbalija spoke at two sessions today: WS #335 Fragmented reality. New horizons of digital distrust and WS #66 Reassessing government role in IG: How to embrace Leviathan. Read our reports from WS #335 and WS #66.
Our Head of Digital Commerce and Internet Policy Marilia Maciel spoke at OF #4 Digital self-determination: a pillar of digital democracy. Read our report from OF #4.
Visit our booth!
If you are attending the IGF in person, swing by the IGF village and visit our booth! Our brand new Geneva Digital Atlasand Stronger Digital Voices from Africa report are on display along with many other resources and goodies from Diplo and the Geneva Internet Platform.