Google in Favor an Open and Participatory Internet

30/04/2014

Google in Favor an Open and Participatory Internet

Pedro Less is Director of Government Affairs and Public Policy for Latin America at Google, and was an active participant at NetMundial, the meeting that has just come to an end in Brazil.

Involved in regional and international Internet Governance discussions since 2007, Pedro Less believes that preserving and advancing open and consultative decision-making on Internet governance issues is essential to ensuring a transformative platform.

The experience he acquired as teacher at the South School on Internet Governance (SSIG) and Vice President for Public Policy at the Latin American and Caribbean Internet and e-Commerce Federation (EcomLAC) allow him to speak with authority on the multistakeholder model that the transition of oversight of the IANA functions announced by the United States must follow.

In this sense, he believes that certain key conditions must be met before the transition: support and enhance the multistakeholder model; maintain the security, stability, and resiliency of the Internet DNS; meet the needs and expectation of the global customers and partners of the IANA services; maintain the openness of the Internet; and ensure that oversight of the IANA functions are not transitioned to a multilateral model.

The following is a summary of our interview with Google’s Pedro Less.

¿Which do you and your organization believe should be the key principles governing Internet Governance?

We believe that preserving and advancing open and consultative decision-making on Internet governance issues is essential to ensuring that global citizens are able to take advantage of this transformative platform both now and in the future. As such, we support the following substantive principles:

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Policies should ensure a safe, secure, open, interoperable, and resilient Internet.

Policies should recognize not only that individual human rights apply online just as they do offline, but also the enabler power of the Internet for the realization of human rights.

Principles should protect the Internet’s critical infrastructure and necessary actors from undue interference or actions that could diminish people’s ability to enjoy human rights in its civil, political, economic, social and cultural dimensions.

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