The Internet we want is open, trustworthy, and safe. For everyone. But challenges remain: high costs, fragile infrastructure, shutdowns, and privacy threats. Our Action Plan is a roadmap for progress, ...
Around the world, our 130 chapters and special interest groups work locally, regionally, and globally to keep the Internet a force for good: open, globally connected, secure, and trustworthy. Several ...
People are what ultimately hold the Internet together. The Internet’s development has been based on voluntary cooperation and collaboration. Cooperation and collaboration remain the essential factors ...
make a big impact on Internet governance in your community? receive training and connect with a network of key influencers in the Internet governance sphere? attend a key Internet event? gain access ...
While we have included a number of tutorials on DNSSEC in our site, this page lists providers of longer training classes, online training sessions or course materials that could be used to create such ...
Under pressure from social challenges and business interests, governments’ efforts to regulate various aspects of the Internet are intensifying worldwide. But even well-meaning policies can undermine ...
The Internet is a global resource. Every day, decisions about it impact who gets to use it where, how, and at what cost. But who gets to make those decisions? Who actually runs the Internet? The ...
Located in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains in western Canada, Calgary is a city of skyscrapers—and it’s fast becoming a tech hub. Yet a little over a decade ago, all of the city’s Internet ...
To overcome decades of conflict and isolation, a Colombian community builds their own network. With the right policies they might be able to use it. In Buenos Aires, a rural town in Colombia, some ...
What Are the Internet’s Critical Properties? When we talk about the Internet, what we’re really describing is a set of practices and norms. We call these the critical properties, and they describe the ...
If any of the terms of this model draft are inconsistent with applicable local law, the chapter will be expected to comply with local law and notify the Internet Society of such discrepancies.
There likely isn’t a simple “yes” or “no” answer to such a question, but it sparks an interesting thought at a time when universal access to information and quality lifelong learning (UN Sustainable ...
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