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Internet Governance Forum (IGF)

Dynamic Coalition on Open Standards (DCOS)

The DCOS was the very first Dynamic Coalition announced at the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) in Athens, Greece. The initial announcement is online here. The first discussions took place in Athens during the IGF 2006 workshop on Open Standards. FSFE is one of the initial partners of the DCOS, and FSFE president Georg Greve is part of the DCOS interim steering committee.

It is important to understand that the coalition is still forming, including partners from governments, industry and non-governmental organisations. The following information was distributed during the IGF workshop in Athens in 2006, and provides a first idea of the Dynamic Coalition:

    IGF Dynamic Coalition on Open Standards 
    
    IGF 2006, Athens, Greece
    
    What: 
    
    The IGF Dynamic Coalition on Open Standards (IGF DCOS) will frame and
    define the most urgent problems related to open technology standards
    and application interoperability and suggest straightforward, workable
    solutions that can be implemented by all stakeholders. In support of
    Paragraph 90j of the Tunis Agenda, which reaffirms the commitment of
    all WSIS stakeholders to ``developing and implementing e-government
    applications based on open standards in order to enhance the growth
    and interoperability of e-government systems, at all levels,
    furthering access to government information .... thereby furthering
    access to government information and services and contributing to
    building ICT networks and developing services that are available
    anywhere and anytime, to anyone and on any device,'' IGF DCOS will
    focus on best practices in government policy and procurement practices
    for public documents and services.
    
    IGF DCOS will pay particular attention to the needs of developing
    economies, including capacity building, technology transfer, access
    and other requirements.
    
    The coalition will host an open mailing list and hold several meetings
    (location and dates to be determined) before presenting its progress
    at the 2007 IGF in Rio de Janeiro.
    
    Who:
    
    The IGF DCOS interim steering committee is tasked with some
    organizational details, but substantive work will be done by the IGF
    DCOS membership. The interim steering committee of the IGF DCOS
    includes representatives from key stakeholder groups.
    
    Government   Brazil, Rogerio Santanna 
    
    Standards Organization   World Wide Web Consortium, Daniel Dardailler
    
    Industry   Sun Microsystems, Susy Struble ;
               Free Software Foundation Europe, Georg Greve 
    
    Civil Society   Consumer Project on Technology, Jamie Love ;
                    IP Justice, Robin Gross 
    
    Academia   Yale Information Society Project, Laura DeNardis;
               Bibliotheca Alexandrina, Professor Magdy Nagi
    
    Other supporters and participants include the Library of Alexandria,
    the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and the South Centre Innovation,
    Access to Knowledge and Intellectual Property Programme (IAIPP).
    
    Membership in the IGF DCOS is open. For more information and to join,
    please visit the Consumer Project for Technology web site.
    
    The IGF DCOS mailing list is open. For details and to sign up, visit
    http://mailman.ctyme.com/listinfo/openstds
    
    How: 
    
    The IGF DCOS work will be based on the core principles of the Internet
    itself and best practices established by the Internet's leading
    standards organizations, the IETF and W3C: openness, rough consensus,
    and when appropriate, ``running code,'' meaning existing best
    practices.
    
    
    Over the next few weeks, the interim steering committee will outline
    the lightweight processes by which the coalition's work will be done
    as well as participant responsibilities. As the IGF DCOS believes in
    transparency and knowledge sharing, it will publish its work in an
    open standard format and offer services based on open technology
    standards.  Contributions to the IGF DCOS and discussions within the
    IGF DCOS are not confidential. We expect the steering committee will
    have some quality control over the group's content and process, but
    divergent viewpoints on topics of study are welcomed. Should the IGF
    DCOS not be able to reach a rough consensus, our goal will be to
    provide clarity around the argument, the divergence and its origins
    (who has different views and why) so that more informed decisions can
    be made.
    
    

Additional Information

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