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July 2019
- 57 participants
- 105 discussions
Dear all,
Are there individuals who work for Twitter Public Policy or Twitter Support
on this list?
Warm regards,
Edwin Kiama
Thoughts become things... choose the good ones!
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------*
*Social Justice & Social Accountability Entrepreneur, Facilitator,
Movements' Coach, Human Rights Defender, *
*#DevolutionIsRevolution Champion*
*The Wanjiku Agenda Kenya Foundation (WAKenya)*Ordinary, fearless Kenyans.
Sauti Ya Wanjiku Social Movement www.sautiyawanjiku.com
https://www.facebook.com/wanjikurevolutionkenya
https://twitter.com/WanjikuRevolt
https://plus.google.com/u/1/+WanjikuMapinduzi/posts
http://www.scribd.com/wmkenya
"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed people can change
the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." *~Margaret Mead*
2
1
Fwd: Invitation to join the Africa Youth IGF session planning working group
by Keith Andere 07 Jul '19
by Keith Andere 07 Jul '19
07 Jul '19
Dear Listers,
This might of interest to some of you.
Regards,
Keith.
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From:SILLAH Kawsu <kawsu.sillah(a)gmail.com>
Date: Thu, 2 May 2019, 22:47
Subject: Invitation to join the Africa Youth IGF session planning working
group
To: KAWSU ESSA SILLAH <kawsu.sillah(a)gmail.com>
Cc: Keith Andere <kephand(a)gmail.com>
Dear All,
I am transmitting this message on behalf of my colleague Mr. Keith Andere,
Youth Representative at African Internet Governance Forum
<https://afigf.africa/>'s Multi Advisory Group
<https://afigf.africa/sites/default/files/2018/Composition%20of%20African%20…>
(AfIGF MAG) for 2019-2020. Mr. Andere is currently working on planning the
Youth session at upcoming 8th session of African Internet Governance Forum
to be held in September 2019 in a location to be determined.
Accordingly, Mr. Andere is inviting young people active in the field of
ICT/Internet policy related discussions to join the African YouthIGF
Working Group. Interested candidates should be between the age of 18-35,
and resident in African continent. To join, register your details from this
link HERE.
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1L-XdZ_A1221TrMzzkZ35vU0e1jCb0Ts7KZv…>
Also to a WhatsApp Group. Find link HERE.
<https://chat.whatsapp.com/BFHCoywlZOM1kT2KY0rfoT>
Kind regards,
Kawsu
<https://docs.google.com/spreadsheets/d/1L-XdZ_A1221TrMzzkZ35vU0e1jCb0Ts7KZv…>
--
Best Regards,
[image: --]SILLAH Kawsu
[image: https://]about.me/ksillah
Website <http://www.auyc.org/> | Twitter <https://twitter.com/AYCommission>
| Facebook <https://www.facebook.com/AYCommission/> | LinkedIn
<https://www.linkedin.com/company/african-youth-commission/about/>
M/WhatsApp: +2209865300
Skype: profkawsu
2
1
[strategic inefficiency is what creates a large number jobs] Jobs fall to 6 year low despite GDP "boom".
by Patrick A. M. Maina 07 Jul '19
by Patrick A. M. Maina 07 Jul '19
07 Jul '19
Dear listers,
In order to create jobs, the government should move away from policies that focus on increasing efficiency to those that are strategically inefficient.
Examples:
1. SMEs, e. g. cottage industries, are inefficient - compared to larger factories, but they can create exponentially more jobs with less tax breaks. Most SMEs also spend all their revenues in Kenya, while promoting other dependent MSMEs.. unlike large corporations which tend to move funds abroad for different reasons (tax, asset protection, hedging, dividends etc).
2. We always see donors (especially, I believe, WB & IMF if I recall correctly) always pushing govt to redirect expenditure from recurrent/wages to "development"/infrastructure (clearly in their own interest as assets can be securitized for their own peace of mind, and more debt can be incurred in dev projects). So they push developing countries to reduce manpower in critical strategic sectors of the economy (less teachers, doctors etc) or to pay below-market wages.
What is the impact of such financial efficiency measures? Do they not care that the employees they keep asking to be retrenched are real people with families? Do they not care that manpower reduction means our children get the worst teacher:pupil or doctor:patient or police:civillian ratios?
Such recommendations lead to massive hidden costs downstream that cannot be attributed (e.g. low quality education, poor healthcare, increased insecurity due to overloaded+underpaid workers). It just looks like we have endless problems of incompetence but it is not by accident... we follow "weaponised advice", designed to keeps us poor.
Efficiency efforts should be limited to enabling high impact service delivery (optimized processes) not financial efficiency.
Government should find ways/tactical excuses to ignore callous and unethical requests/pressures for cold blooded fiscal efficiency.
Public sector Performance Contract targets need to be linked to a basket of grassroots metrics that reflect the general quality of life for the ordinary population (besides GDP, Inflation, NSE Index & exchange rate). This can be presented in dashboard format on eCitizen so that wanjiku can see what is happening, hold officials to account for not delivering and be motivated to support such initiatives (but the data must be *real* to avoid risk of future backlash).
Our "missing middle" problem (i.e. a tiny middleclass) needs to be addressdd. It exists because government incentives for business have focused mainly on Micro enterprises which are too inefficient to be sustainable, and large corporations that are too efficient to fill the jobs gap (and too demanding - always asking for endless concessions just to maintain status quo).
If you track current incentives given to large corporations and account for all outflows and hidden costs (many of these corporations are the architects of grand corruption in the country) - you will see a MASSIVE NET LOSS / WEALTH EXTRACTION directly attributable to corporate activities (e.g. encouraging harphazard spending, lobbying for bad laws or poor incentives).. despite the appearance of "gains" on simplistic paper reports that ignore the full impact.
A thriving middle class (people who are not rich and not poor - with ability to buy a car, spend regularly on mid-level leisure and even save for luxury spending) is what ends poverty and drives a strong economy.
Small and Medium-sized Enterprises SME are the key to a thriving middle class and rapid, large scale jobs creation. They tend to lean towards formality, will often have more educated founders, are inefficient because of scale - but not overly so as to be unsustainable like Micro enterprises, and a few will have potential to grow into mega corporations.
De-risked MSEs are what attracts high quality FDI in the form of venture capital. So rather than pitch tax breaks to global investors, the government should pitch de-risked high potential small enterprises (the way Israel and some EU countries are doing) whose business model has been proven in order to attract capital to scale up the businesses.
The reality of Tax incentives to big corporations is that they only cannibalize the treasury - and these same corporations will do everything they can to minimize local expenditure (even furniture is imported yet we have skilled carpenters), and extract wealth in all manner of ways (e.g. transfer pricing).
Most jobs offered by large factories are low level, while skilled jobs (r&d, conceptualization, design, development) will be outsourced with the (false) excuse that Kenyans are not competent. In reality they just want to prevent HIGH VALUE KNOWLEDGE TRANSFER so that locals don't build indigenous alternatives.
I know some of the things I write are not supposed to be said because it will spoil some lucrative plunder parties.. but I alsonknow many of you know what I am saying is TRUE because you have seen it being done, heard about it or (God forbid) participated in it .
This habit of taming monsters by feeding them with our kids is becoming too much and has to be called out for what it is.
The youth are our children. It is our duty to create an enabling ecosystem framework that attracts opportunities and truly rewards them for innovation.
We need a Kenyan Steve Jobs or Bill Gates who own their own companies - rather than have them and their ideas gobbled up by monopolistic dinosaur corporations that want to suppress their enterpreneurial dreams supressed in order to delay, the next wave of disruptive innovations. We need hundreds of winning case studies - not tens of mostly foreign owned startups (not that it's a bad thing to have foreign ownership, the key thing is that, given our history of suppressed esteem, our youth desperately need role models they can relate to so that they can start BELIEVING in themselves).
We can't just tell youth to be job creators.. that's like telling a starving person to go find food. If they knew how - or where, they would not be starving.
The REAL reason we tell the youth to employ themselves - yet we have not created an enabling framework - is because they have caught us napping and we want to deflect responsibility.
"We" means anyone over 35 years old whether in privage sector or Government. Our parents didn't give us a gift to keep (the opportunities we enjoyed), they gave us a BATON to pass on in a long term RELAY RACE.
Did you drop your baton (I did too)? Pick it up. Ignore the naysayers. Start running.
Link:
https://www.businessdailyafrica.com/news/Formal-jobs-fall-to-6-year-low-des…
Warmest regards,Patrick.
Patrick A. M. Maina[Cross-domain Innovator | Public Policy Analyst - Indigenous Innovations]
5
16
Fwd: [AfrICANN-discuss] [OT] Invitation RightsCon-Tunez: Roundtable discussion about biometrics
by Barrack Otieno 07 Jul '19
by Barrack Otieno 07 Jul '19
07 Jul '19
Listers
This is for your information and attention.
Best Regards
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From:Katitza <katitza(a)eff.org>
Date: Fri, 3 May 2019 00:40
Subject: [AfrICANN-discuss] [OT] Invitation RightsCon-Tunez: Roundtable
discussion about biometrics
To: <africann(a)afrinic.net>
Cc: Jennifer Lynch <jlynch(a)eff.org>
Dear friends:
My colleague Jennifer Lynch, EFF Surveillance Litigation Director,[1] is
organizing a strategic roundtable at RightsCon to discuss biometric
surveillance. If you are working on the issue and also going to RightsCon,
would be great if you can join this conversation. If that's the case, could
you please let Jennifer lynch(a)eff.org <jlynch(a)eff.org> knows directly that
you’re interested in participating?
[1] https://www.eff.org/about/staff/jennifer-lynch
<https://www.eff.org/about/staff/jennifer-lynch>
Thanks so much! Looking forward to seeting you at RightsCon!
Katitza
*Session Title: You're Not Just a Pretty Face: Biometric Surveillance Has
Moved Beyond Face Recognition - How Do We Stop It?*
Session Description: Every day we hear about new developments in face
recognition in China, Israel, the US, and other countries - face
recognition accuracy has improved exponentially; cameras are being deployed
in more and more places; and face recognition is used for more and more
services.
However, by focusing solely on face recognition, activists, NGOs and
lawyers are missing the forest for the trees. Face recognition is now just
one of the many technologies incorporated into vast surveillance systems
and used to track people. Other technologies in these systems - like object
recognition, license plate and text recognition, voice recognition, and
gait recognition - combined with cheap cloud storage and machine learning
are allowing for tracking on a never-before-seen scale.
This session will provide a space to discuss these topics. It will bring in
experts to explain how technologies are working and how they are being
deployed around the world. It will also encourage interactivity by asking
all participants to share stories and contribute ideas for change.
Main Goal of Session: The main goal of this session will be to share
knowledge about the biometric technologies that governments are using or
planning to use to surveil and track their citizens - what are the
capabilities of these surveillance systems; which are the companies
designing the technologies; what activism has worked to limit the reach of
these systems; and how can we strategize and work together to stop them.
Translate to Post-Conference Action: This session will translate to a
post-conference action by building a community of lawyers and activists who
are working together to share knowledge about and fight biometric
surveillance. It may also develop principles for companies that are working
on these technologies.
_______________________________________________
AfrICANN mailing list
AfrICANN(a)afrinic.net
https://lists.afrinic.net/mailman/listinfo/africann
2
1
Hi KICTA Net members. I'm Rafe Mazer, a consumer protection in digital
financial services specialist working in Kenya the past 5 years (and
globally on this toic for 10+ years.)
I just saw the new Data Protection Bill within the National Assembly (
http://parliament.go.ke/sites/default/files/2019-07/The%20Data%20Protection…)
and wanted to raise a discussion internally about Section 38 on Data
Portability to see if KICTA Net may want to engage further on the topic.
Specifically there are two aspects that were concerning:
1. The allowance for 30 days to honor a data subject's request for
information held on them.
In a digital economy, this is an excessively long period, and also quite a
blunt instrument to apply across the entire economy, where health records
are different from government records are different from financial records,
etc. This would also kill the utility of portability in spaces like
FinTech. Imagine I want to use my economic history with data controllers to
get competing mobile loan offers. It could take up to 30 days to share that
information, which is not aligned with the near-instant nature of these
products and consumers' expectations on timing. Already the Bill rightly
notes portability should only apply where "technically feasible" to exempt
low-tech industries or providers, so there is no sense is saying that those
who are deemed to be able to comply technically with portability should
have up to 30 days to do so. If this language is kept in it will be used to
delay--and defacto deny--consumer use of their data for increased choice in
digital segments of the economy.
Further, since access to information is included in the same section as
portability, and they are not explicitly differentiated, you could argue
data controllers have not just 30 days to honor a portability request, but
to even tell you what data they hold on you the data subject. This is far
too long a time to permit for a basic consumer data right. Right now some
providers offer financial statements to the data subject much faster than
that--in minutes or seconds--but allowing 30 days could encourage setting
practices to that standard going forward, reducing consumer access to their
own data not improving it.
2. The allowance of a "reasonable fee" to be charged for a portability
request could lead to anti-competitive and excessive pricing. "Reasonable"
is highly subjective, and we have seen Competition Authority already had to
intervene to stop anti-competitive use of wholesale USSD rates in mobile
financial services (
https://techweez.com/2017/03/17/cak-wants-safaricom-lower-ussd-charges-mobi…)
It is highly likely a "reasonable fee" window would be deployed similarly
where beneficial to firms and require ex-post intervention. The original
language from the 2018 Bill where this was free of charge seems a much
better approach.
Curious to hear others' thoughts or context on this section, and how
KICTANet could help to fix this section for the final version of the Bill
so we don't create an anti-innovation and anti-consumer portability regime
that will be the law of the land.
Thanks for the chance to share and discuss on this platform,
Rafe Mazer
4
7
Good afternoon Listers,
The Kenya Internet Governance Forum (KIGF) is an annual meeting that brings
together various stakeholder groups to dialogue on ICT and Internet policy.
While the discussions give soft policy outcomes, KIGF is a knowledge
sharing platform that informs and inspires policy actors in both the public
and private sectors. The national forum also feeds into the regional and
global IGFs through a chain of reporting and representation to the regional
and global IGFs to ensure a bottom-up Internet policy development processes
and a strong link between global internet policies and the national one.
This year's event shall be held on *1 August 2018 in Nairobi. *Kindly save
the date. Details of the venue and other logistics will be communicated in
the coming days.
On behalf of the local Multistakeholder Advisory Group (MAG), we'd be
interested to hear your views on the issues and topics that you think ought
to be discussed during this year's Kenya IGF. We have 3 themes in line with
the Global IGF 2019 Themes
<https://www.intgovforum.org/multilingual/content/igf-2019-themes> i.e. Data
Governance; Digital Inclusion; and, Security, Safety, Stability and
Resilience.
Kindly share your input in this *Google Form.
<https://forms.gle/VrLBYuwScjjJmixq8> *We'll be happy to receive your
feedback by *Sunday, 7 July, 2019. *
We shall then compile your input and prepare the topics for the pre-IGF
online discussion in the coming weeks and the final IGF Programme.
Good day
*Victor Kapiyo*
MAG 2019
====================================================
*“Your attitude, not your aptitude, will determine your altitude” Zig
Ziglar*
2
3
CALL TO PARTICIPATE AT THE 4TH EDITION OF KENYA SCHOOL OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE (KESIG)
by mwara gichanga 05 Jul '19
by mwara gichanga 05 Jul '19
05 Jul '19
Dear Listers
The internet has become a vital platform for social, economic and political development in the world, and more increasing so here in Kenya. These bring about a lot of national interests around internet governance debates across all sectors .
The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is pleased to welcome applications from those individuals interested in internet Governance for the 4th Edition of the Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG). KeSIG takes place prior to the Kenya IGF, with the aim of introducing beginners to basic concepts in internet policy making. This is with the goal of creating and increasing the available expertise for participation in local and global internet governance processes.
Learn more about KeSIG HERE
Whether you are a policy maker, a researcher, a regulator, an engineer, a journalist, an entrepreneur or a human rights defender – if you are interested and want to get involved in internet policy and governance , KeSIG is designed perfectly for you!
KeSIG will take place over a 3-day course from the 29th-31st July 2019, with the deadline for submissions closing on 13th July 2019, and announcement of selected participants following soon after.
Kindly access application form HERE
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4TH EDITION OF KENYA SCHOOL OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE(KESIG)
KICTANet welcomes applications for fellows for the 4th Edition of the Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG...
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For any further information or clarification , kindly email info(a)kictanet.or.ke or Mwara Gichanga mwaragichanga(a)kictanet.or.ke
Warmly
Mwara Gichanga
Tech Policy Associate
KICTANet
9
11
Listers,
Might be of interest to those following global Policy issues.
Best Regards
---------- Forwarded message ---------
From: Jasper Mangwana, eng <mailer(a)isoc.org>
Date: Wed, Jul 3, 2019 at 10:57 PM
Subject: "Policy Engagement Alert" for July 2019.
To: Barrack Otieno <otieno.barrack(a)gmail.com>
"Policy Engagement Alert" for July 2019.
Hello Barrack,
Dear Colleagues,
Please find below our "Policy Engagement Alert" for July 2019.
This is a monthly information update, shared with our members to make you
aware of forthcoming ISOC submissions, our policy-related engagements,
meetings and dialogues, or upcoming policy documents where your input might
be sought.
We hope that you find the below information useful.
Best regards,
Carl Gahnberg
*Upcoming policy papers or surveys for release or out for comment*
The *Policy Brief - Principles for Responsible Data Handling* is now
available on the Internet Society website at:
https://www.internetsociety.org/policybriefs/responsible-data-handling/
*Engagements (Conferences, National IGFs, etc.) *
*7th Annual LAC Telecommunications Congress (CLT), Cordoba, Argentina, 1-5
July *.
The seventh edition of the "Congreso Latinoamericano de Telecomunicationes"
will be held in Cordoba, Argentina, from 1st to 5th July. Sebastian
Bellagamba and Raquel Gatto will be speaking at the event. More information
can be found here: www.clt.lat/2019/eng
*IGF France, Paris, 4 July*
The French version of the IGF will be held on 4 July in Paris, Constance
Bommelaer and Konstantinos Komatis will be engaged in discussions relating
to regulation and IoT security. More information is available here:
https://www.igf-france.fr/
*Taiwan IGF, Taipei, Taiwan July 5-6*.
The APAC Bureau will be conducting two sessions, on Internet
Consolidation, and on Multistakeholder Policymaking in Practice, at this
year's TWIGF. More information can be found here: https://www.igf.org.tw/
*ITU Global Symposium for Regulators, 9-12 July, Vanuatu*
The APAC Bureau will speak about inclusive connectivity at the ITU-GSR.
Discussions will focus on digital strategies and policies, infrastructure
regulation, trust and confidence in a data driven economy, spectrum
management policy, and 5G. More information can be found here:
www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Conferences/GSR/2019/Pages/...
<https://www.itu.int/en/ITU-D/Conferences/GSR/2019/Pages/default.aspx>
*APAC Regional IGF, Vladivostok, Russia, July 16-19*
The APAC Bureau will lead two workshops, one on Internet consolidation and
another on IoT security at this year's APrIGF. The Bureau is involved in
various committees of the APrIGF Multistakeholder Group, with Raj Singh
currently chairing the APrIGF MSG. More information can be found here:
https://aprigf.ru/
*7th Africa DNS Foru**m, **Gaborone, Botswana**, 22**-24 July,*
The 7th Africa DNS Forum will be taking place in Gaborone, Botswana from
the 22nd to 24th of July 2019. The event is now organized by AFTLD and
ICANN and ISOC will be attending to make presentations on topics on DNS and
security. More about the event here https://dnsforum.africa/
*West Africa Internet Governance Forum, 25 - 26** July**,** 2**019*
Economic Commission of West Africa States (ECOWAS) and West Africa
Telecommunications Regulators Assembly (WATRA) are leading the West African
Internet Governance Forum (WAIGF) to establish a real multi-stakeholder
platform for discussion on Internet issues. WAIGF meets once a year to
discuss public policy issues related to Internet by including all
stakeholders. This year is the 11th edition hosted in the Gambia, Banjul,
from 25 to 26 July 2019 with the theme "Shared Responsibilities of
Stakeholders for a Robust Internet Governance Ecosystem". This will be
preceded by the 2nd West African School of Internet Governance (WASIG) from
22 - 24 July 2019. ISOC will be represented by Verengai. For more
information please follow http://www.waigf.org/
*Youth IGF-USA Day Zero, July 24. **Washington, DC,*
The Internet Society is helping to sponsor an event for youth ahead of the
IGF-USA on July 25. The half-day event - being planned by youth for youth -
will feature a keynote speaker and interactive conversations surrounding
internet governance issues. NARB Summer Research Analyst Anna Higgins is
leading the event.
*Internet Governance Forum USA,** July 25**, **Washington, DC*
The Internet Society North America Regional Bureau will attend IGF-USA for
panels and discussions on internet governance issues such as techlash,
cybersecurity and resiliency in internet infrastructure, and digital
inclusion. Katie Jordan - NARB's Senior Policy Advisor - was on the
planning committee for the panel on digital inclusion, which will discuss
the digital divide, digital literacy, and innovative solutions to solving
disparities in broadband access. Read more about IGF-USA here
<https://www.igfusa.us/>.
*North America Regional Bureau Chapter Workshop July 26, **Washington, DC,*
Chapter representatives will gather in Washington DC to collaborate and
plan ISOC mission activities in addition to participating in a masters
class on membership recruitment, retention and engagement .
*Launch of Indigenous Connectivity Summit Registration, Hilo, Hawaii. *
NARB opened up registration for its third Indigenous Connectivity Summit
that will take place in Hilo, Hawaii, from November 12-15, 2019. The summit
is community-led and brings together Indigenous leaders, community members,
community network operators, Internet service providers, researchers and
policy makers with a common goal: connecting Indigenous communities to
fast, affordable and sustainable Internet. Learn more about ICS 2019 here
<https://www.internetsociety.org/events/indigenous-connectivity-summit/2019/>
.
*Highlights of Recent Activities*
*Northwest Territories Tour, June 7-14. *
NARB's Katie Jordan and Mark Buell - with the help of Mike West, Spencer
Sevilla, and Dustin Phillips - traveled to the Northwest Territories of
Canada to speak with communities about the benefits of community networks
and the training processes we use. NARB is excited to begin training
community members in Ulukhaktok, NWT, Canada, this year. Read more about
our visit to Ulukhaktok in NNSL News here
<https://nnsl.com/nwtnewsnorth/more-options-for-internet/>.
*IG discussion with Francophone Missions, Geneva, 18 June*
ISOC and ICANN was invited by the group of francophone ambassadors to the
UN in Geneva to discuss emerging policy topics (Consolidation, Security,
etc.) as well as Internet governance issues. Constance Bommelaer
represented ISOC at this occasion. The discussion showed the importance of
fluid discussions between stakeholder groups as policy leaders are more and
more engaged in the digital sphere.
*UN GGE, European consultations, Brussels, 20 June*
The Internet Society participated at the EU Institute for Security Studies'
(EUISS) session on the United Nations Group of Governmental Experts in
advancing responsible behavior in cyberspace in the context of
international security (UN GGE). The 73rd UN General Assembly established
the UN GGE (2019-2021) and its first meeting will be held on 9-13 December
2019. The GGE Chair, Ambassador Guilherne Patriota (Brazil) was in
attendance. The discussions were focused on the mandate of the UN GGE. The
Internet Society was represented at this meeting by Constance Bommelaer
*Asia-Pacific ICT Ministerial Meeting, Singapore, 25-26 June*
The APAC Bureau participated in the high-level APT-MM, which drew up a
five-year plan for ICT development in the region. The resulting ICT
Ministerial Statement makes clear references to the multistakeholder model,
fostering trust online, free flow of data, interoperability and
connectivity for unserved and underserved areas--reflecting our key
messages in our sustained engagement with the fora and with individual
governments in the region. More information can be found here
www.apt.int/2019-APT-MM
*Hawaii Chapter Launch. *
The North America Regional Bureau team is happy to announce the opening of
the US Hawai'i chapter. Read more about the chapter and its mission in this
post
<https://www.internetsociety.org/blog/2019/06/community-dispatch:-new-hawaii…>
by
Chapter Chair Burt Lum. The US Hawai'i chapter will help coordinate
the Indigenous
Connectivity Summit
<https://www.internetsociety.org/events/indigenous-connectivity-summit/2019/>
to
be held in Hawai'i this November. Find the chapter website here
<http://www.isochawaii.org/>.
*Op-ed on internet access and indigenous languages in the Toronto Star. *
NARB's Regional Bureau Chief Mark Buell co-wrote an op-ed in the Toronto
Star this week on how Internet access can help conserve and revitalize
indigenous languages. It called for more work to be done in
funding Internet access in indigenous communities. Read the piece here
<https://www.thestar.com/opinion/contributors/2019/06/25/internet-access-key…>
.
*Op-ed on bipartisan solutions for net neutrality in The Hill. *
Katie Jordan - NARB's Senior Policy Advisor - published an op-ed in The
Hill detailing the need for bipartisan collaboration on net neutrality
policy. The op-ed also champions NARB's net neutrality multistakeholder
process that wrapped up last month. Read the multistakeholder process
report here
<https://www.internetsociety.org/resources/doc/2019/net-neutrality-process-r…>
and
the op-ed here
<https://thehill.com/opinion/technology/448561-america-needs-bipartisan-solu…>
.
*IoT Security Framework in **U**ruguay.*
On 12 June, ISOC has signed an agreement with AGESIC - Government of
Uruguay to develop recommendations for an IoT Security framework, similar
to the processes developed in Canada, France and others. The kick-off
meeting is expected to happen on mid July, to be organized together with
the local Chapter. Information can be found here:
www.internetsociety.org/blog/2019/06/...
<https://www.internetsociety.org/blog/2019/06/uruguay-joins-others-taking-ac…>
*2019 Hackathon@AIS**, 19-20 June, Uganda*
ISOC and AFRINIC co-organized the 3rd Hackathon@AIS alongside the Africa
Internet Summit in Kampala, Uganda. The event attracted more than 100
participants for the two day event held on the 19th and 20th of June. 17
fellows from 12 countries were supported by ISOC to attend the event. 12
expert facilitators lead the participants in covering 5 main topics related
to open Internet Standards development. To learn more about the event,
please visit the event webpage here
https://hackathon.internetsummitafrica.org
*ISOC ARB Participates in the 2nd GFCE Triple I workshop in Kampala, 19
June 2019, Uganda *
This workshop is initiated by the Global Forum for Cyber Expertise (
https://www.thegfce.com) and is supported by AfriNIC (https://afrinic.net/)
AfricaCERT (https://www.africacert.org) AFNOG https://www.afnog.org/)
(WACREN (https://www.wacren.net) ICANN (http://www.icann.org) the Dutch
Ministry of Economic Affairs and Climate and the Internet Society. The
workshop covered topics on open Internet Standards, security and encryption
and also best practices to help improve Internet reliability.
Sessions on IoT and MANRS were lead by ISOC at the event.
*G20 Leaders Summit, 28-29 June, Osaka, Japan*
G20 Heads of State and invited International Organizations leaders met in
Japan to find common agreement under the 8 key thematic areas: Global
Economy, Trade and Investment, Innovation, Environment and Energy,
Employment, Women's Empowerment, Development and Health. They've released
2 outcomes documents: G20 Osaka Leaders' Declaration
<https://g20.org/pdf/documents/en/FINAL_G20_Osaka_Leaders_Declaration.pdf>which
mentions the benefits of technology and exchange of best practices,
including the value of security in digital economy and the importance of
bridging the digital divide; and G20 Osaka Leaders' Statement on preventing
exploitation of the Internet for terrorism and violent extremism conducive
to Terrorism (VECT)
<https://g20.org/pdf/documents/en/FINAL_G20_Statement_on_Preventing_Terroris…>
which
builds on the Christchurch Call statement calling for online platforms to
take action.
*The Future of Tech Policy in India, Delhi, India, June 27*.
The APAC Bureau supported discussions organised by Medianama to identify
concerns and opportunities brought by various technology policies,
including encryption and cybersecurity, in India. More information can be
found here: www.medianama.com/2019/06/...
<https://www.medianama.com/2019/06/223-announcing-policynext-on-the-future-o…>
*1st Africa Region Data Protection and Privacy Conference, 23-27 June 2019 *
ISOC participated in the Network of African Data Protection Authorities and
Ghana Data Protection Commission hosted the Africa Data Protection and
Privacy Conference, from June 23rd– June 27th 2019 in Accra, Ghana. The
Africa Data Protection and Privacy Conference convened established
Authorities in Africa and Global North counterparts for thought leadership,
insight, best practice, high level strategic content and networking,
providing a critical platform for promoting Africa's drive for Data
Protection and Privacy laws in Africa. For more information visit the link,
https://ardppc.com/
*OECD CDEP and Going Digital Project Phase II, Paris, 1-3 July, Paris,
France*
The CDEP will convene at OECD HQ in Paris to discuss upcoming work and new
directions for the OECD's cross-sectoral initiative "Going Digital Phase
II", discussing among other things the role of online platforms. ISOC
participates in these processes through the Internet Technical Advisory
Committee to the OECD (ITAC). Constance Bommelaer and Carl Gahnberg have
participated in the event.
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Re: [kictanet] [who are the sponsors? Managing indoctrination risks...] CALL TO PARTICIPATE AT THE 4TH EDITION OF KENYA SCHOOL OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE (KESIG)
by Grace Bomu 04 Jul '19
by Grace Bomu 04 Jul '19
04 Jul '19
1. Let's agree to disagree. I respect your views but do not want to lose a
great idea like KeSIG to semantics and tradition.
2. KICTANet is donor funded. The theory of change is people centred ICT
policy reforms in a multistakeholder space. Any donor who gives money
understands that the network is made up of diverse views. Donors do not
dictate content, they support programmes or activities.
3. Please read the book then we can discuss further. I find Dr. Kurbalija's
organisation of internet governance issues genius as it helps beginners to
make sense of a field that is full of jargon which may scare many away.
4. KICTANet is registered as a trust. The registered trustees have been
petitioning for incorporation since 2016. This has been a difficult journey
as it is at the discretion of the Minister (for lands). There is a plan for
staggered succession. I guess all the energy has been directed at getting
the incorporation so that there can be an proper organisation separate from
the volunteers who are setting it up. There was an assessment of KICTANet
in 2007 where options for registration of the organisation were floated.
The urgency to formalise the organisation became apparent after the new
Constitution when public participation was made mandatory. A group of us
volunteered to pursue the registration in 2015 after the Kenya IGF. We
consulted the founding members and got their blessing to go ahead.
At the end of every year we have a state of ICT event. During this, people
review the year and give suggestions for the next year's projects.
Fundraising is on the basis of these suggestions. The gist of KICTANet has
been a space for everyone interested in ICT policy development. Examples of
policy issues that have been worked on from a proactive approach in the
recent past include blockchain, elections technology and data protection. I
believe the policy research is on the website and you can see the names of
all the people who were involved.
5. It is easy to become an "insider". Just volunteer for a task/programme
for example KeSIG and KIGF which are currently being planned. You can also
bring an issue you care about and use the KICTANet brand we have built to
work on it. This is how we got into the programme on community networks.
6. There has been thought about an organisational structure. It is
envisaged that once incorporated (and funded), the trust will have
employees who will run the programmes while trustees will be a board for
governance. But all these are still visions. For the time being we have a
convenor who provides strategic leadership and a steering team made of
trustees and associates.
Yes, volunteers are paid stipends and honoraria whenever the funding
permits.
I am not aware of any complaints from members/officials and would be happy
to channel them to whoever can address them.
I believe KICTANet has built a reputation in policy making circles locally,
regionally and globally. Please understand that locally, we are working in
an environment where most public bodies do not have proper public
participation policies. Sometimes they send notices for public
participation just a few days before expiry of the input period. I know
many here would want more meaningful public participation, for example
proactive participation. That said, it is the duty of everyone to notify
the network when they see a relevant opportunity for public participation.
Moderators do not have to be neutral, all stakeholders have different
interests and backgrounds. Moderators have to be objective and inclusive. I
am assuming that you are referring to moderated debates?
7. Yes, we have students assisting to run projects. We also have other
groups of people who are learning, even though formally. I am hoping that
they will come here and introduce themselves to you. Though between you and
I, your style can be a bit intimidating. See how you tore apart an innocent
message from a young Kenyan announcing KeSIG :)
With regard to documents, there was a revamping of the website and I have
also noted that I can't see all the annual reports, state of ICT/End year
reports as well as the strategic report, which talks about the
organisational structure that you are interested in. Let me look for them
and get them posted.
Yours,
On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 at 22:28, Patrick A. M. Maina <pmaina2000(a)yahoo.com>
wrote:
> Thank you Grace for the detailed response and for acknowledging that the
> issues that I raised are valid. Unfortunately your response seems to be
> quite generalized/vague and that raises even more questions and/or
> observations...
>
> 1. On the use of "school" to denote an event: Is it really an issue for a
> "global" entity (I suppose you mean donors) to address? Do we not have our
> own values as Kenya(ns) - or are they imposed on us? Shouldn't decisions on
> core principles and values be made by local chapters?
>
> Disruption does not mean the use of deceptive tactics. To understand the
> concept of disruption, please look up Clayton Christensen's extensive
> work on the subject (see link #1).
>
> 2. Does KICTANet have a policy on sources of funding (e.g. to avoid
> conflicts of interest or getting captured by vested interests via
> dependency)? Recognizing that whoever pays the piper calls the tune, how
> is this challenge managed? What about the perceptions of receiving money
> from scandal ridden companies that are known for aggressive lobbying /
> lawbreaking?
>
> While I appreciate your personal assurances, it is better to have
> formalized institutional checks and balances as they are much more robust
> (continuity, consistency, verifiability, documented expectations etc). I
> shouldn't even be making this argument because the need for institutions
> and systems approach is so obvious in Kenya given the pervasiveness of
> corruption.
>
> 3. Isn't a taxonomy too abstract (more of a contextual lexicology guide)
> to be considered as the basis for a training program? But what about the
> actual course content? Where can it be viewed/downloaded from? How was it
> developed? What quality assurance processes were applied? and so on...
>
> 4. KICTANet was registered in 2016? Noted. What type of organization is
> KICTANet formally registered as? Is it an NGO?
>
> Three years looks like a long time for such an important organization to
> operate without formal governance or institutionalized accountability...?
>
> Who are the current leadership team and for how long have they served? How
> are/were they selected? Are they willing to embrace democratic ethos in
> multi-stakeholder leadership (e.g. via annual elections and paving way for
> new elected leaders)?
>
> Where do we get the audited (or unaudited) financial accounts for the 3
> years that the organization has been in existence - in the spirit of
> transparency and accountability?
>
> What about the budget and planned programs for this year? I couldn't
> locate them online. I remember requesting for this some months ago and I
> believe there was an assurance that it would be published?
>
> 5. The idea of "outsider" vs "insider" perspectives has come up previously
> as well. Perhaps it points to the need for more transparency about the
> organization. So who are the insiders? How does one become one? What is the
> basic knowledge that they should know and where do they get it? Perhaps an
> insider on-boarding guide can be published so that all stakeholders get to
> be insiders?
>
> 6. Please kindly share KICTANet's current org structure (does not have to
> be a diagram) and who is in what role? How many commitees currently exist
> and what are they working on? Who are volunteers and who are paid (stipends
> / honorariums etc)? This knowledge can help manage stakeholder
> expectations.
>
> If the team is adequate and diverse, why do we occasionally see complaints
> from some members/officials about a growing list of pending items (some
> have even been overtaken by events)? Also why does KICTANet seem to have
> low influence in policy circles (e.g. members not notified of opportunities
> for public participation or notified late as to negate meaningful
> participation)? Is there a leadership challenge?
>
> How is moderator neutrality ensured in the platform? Some messages on the
> platform go through but it seems like others don't (and yet others seem to
> go to a limited set of individuals)? Can you shed more light on how that
> works and what is the basis + oversight for it?
>
> 7. Do you have tertiary level students represented in senior and top
> leadership roles (would be answered by #4 & #6)? Which Universities and
> TVETs?
>
> Thanks again and I appreciate your taking time from your very busy
> schedule to give a response. If governance can be ironed out, the
> organization will be much more robust, effective and impactful - hence the
> value of this discussion.
>
> Enjoy your evening & be blessed!
>
> Brgds,
> Patrick
>
> Patrick A. M. Maina
> [Cross-domain Innovator | Independent Public Policy Analyst - Indigenous
> Innovations]
>
> *Links / References:*
>
> 1. Christensen et al; What Is Disruptive Innovation?
> https://hbr.org/2015/12/what-is-disruptive-innovation
>
>
>
> On Thursday, July 4, 2019, 8:19:34 PM GMT+3, Grace Bomu <
> nmutungu(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> Patrick,
> 1. You raise high level policy issues which I will share with colleagues
> in the global SIGs movement. Why do we use the word school? Why are we
> non-conforming to the traditional methods of accreditation for training? I
> think this comes from the (disruptive) history of internet policy making.
> 2. As regards the sources of funding, I totally get your fears. However,
> we live in this community where each of the stakeholders is differently
> abled. What we have is an understanding that KICTANet's role is to convene
> meetings while the funders is to resource. I can assure you that there is
> independence between the funders and content of the meetings. Indeed, the
> KeSIG and KIGF strive for inclusive and meaningful views from all
> stakeholder groups, including those that do not contribute resources.
> Contribution in terms of policy ideas is just as highly regarded.
> 3. Our programme is based on Diplo Foundation's taxonomy of internet
> governance issues with local adaptation. Please check out An Introduction
> to Internet Governance by Jovan Kurbalija. If you read the 2016 KeSIG
> report, you will also find the rationale for starting KeSIG- we had a lot
> of people interested in internet governance who needed to learn the basics-
> what is the internet, its history, Kenya's role in global policy making,
> the actors etc.
> 4. Yes to all that. KICTANet as a network is about 10 years old but
> KICTANet as an organisation is barely 3 years old. The current steering
> team is doing great work in setting up the organisational structures with
> the assistance of donors. Please check each KICTANet report for the
> specific donors. As someone who has worked in this team, I am struck by the
> strategy to get local companies to also support policy making work.
> Although so far we have only received project based grants, I am sure that
> future teams will be able to get more core support from these companies.
> After all, this is our country and world to build.
> 5. absolutely. Please check KICTANet website for publications. You will
> note that they are all enabled by the generosity of our partners. I am also
> glad to note that the new kids of KICTANet are adopting video and other
> more interesting methods to curate our experiences. PS: The new kids
> introduced the idea of video while volunteering in the committees. They are
> also very active and more comfortable with discussing policy on social
> media as opposed to here.
> 6 &6. I am aware that the current team has been planning/looking for
> resources for a community summit for the KICTANet community to meet and
> discuss among others: organisational structure, succession and
> sustainability. Look out for this. I welcome you to think of other models
> for financial resource mobilisation. Should KICTANet community membership
> be subscription based? What then do we do with members who have other
> resources eg critical analysis? We also need policy makers because they
> need to hear ideas as they develop even before they are formally presented
> to them as policy proposals. Remember the diversity of stakeholders is
> what makes KICTANet what it is.
> 7. We do have a lot of students at KICTANet, thanks to the many lecturers
> who send them our way. Other students find their way from these calls we
> make here. But our diversity is not limited to students. We also have
> artistes (credit to them for videos), self taught programmers, designers
> and other new age professionals. Please please come to KeSIG and see
> KICTANet in action. I am sure you will appreciate some of the inner
> workings more.
>
> All the issues you raise are valid. But I also find that you are coming
> from a sort of outsider perspective. This is by no means a disadvantage. On
> the contrary, it would be great if you could contribute some time towards
> the backend and bring your fresh ideas to work. So again, I invite you to
> join one of the working groups or committees and share ideas for ongoing
> programmes. But I warn you, it takes a lot of hours and dedication to
> execute a programme. Infact, this is the reason I could not answer you
> sooner.
>
> I hope this sheds more light on your questions.
>
> Warmly,
>
> On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 at 09:02, Patrick A. M. Maina <pmaina2000(a)yahoo.com>
> wrote:
>
> Thank you Grace for the constructive and calm response.
>
> The idea of offering training on policy is a good one - in principle -
> because, if properly implemented, it can help promote broader,
> intellectually diverse and meaningful engagement on important policy issues.
>
> My *good-faith concerns* are with the approach taken by certain
> initiatives - perhaps with "SIG" as an example. Let me offer some
> constructive suggestions to help build on the underlying idea and improve
> it (as well as ideas for broader improvements to KICTANet's governance
> framework):
>
> *1. Using the word "school" to market and EVENT can convey deceptive
> intent:* The word "school" has certain connotations (and its use may have
> legal implications); it creates certain automatic impressions, assumptions
> and expectations in peoples minds. Using the word to lends an aura of *pedagogical
> robustness* and *institutional credibility* to what appears to be
> essentially a partisan event/forum. This can be interpreted as deceptive
> advertising and might also be in conflict with education laws / regulations
> (lawyers can advise).
>
> Is it really necessary to rely on deception to attract participants? Why
> go to such lengths? The choice of deceptive branding (coupled with
> historical support from scandal ridden corporations) can send legitimate
> signals that the intention is to brainwash / indoctrinate participants -
> especially in the context of policy agendas.
>
> Unless I'm missing something... Could you please clarify the historical
> rationale for calling it a "school" and whether, in view of the above
> considerations, it would make sense to drop the word "school" and just call
> it what it really is: a potentially partisan discussion forum?
>
> Participants should be given a written *conflict of interest advisory*
> prior to the event so that they can contextualize the content's point of
> view (if there have not been any robust quality controls). This helps
> promote transparency.
>
> *2. The source of funding matters: *
>
> Examples:
> *a.* Consider the debate of whether religious institutions, the supposed
> custodians of our "core values", should accept contributions from dubious
> sources. Accepting the funds compromises the perceived moral authority of
> the institution thus destroying its credibility. It is also a form of moral
> laundering. Civil Society / Non-profits also face these challenges. They
> rely on donations to survive - but what happens when there is a conflict of
> values e.g. in cases where the donor is a known lawbreaker who pursues
> profit with disregard for ethics and against public-interest values?
>
> *b.* There is a saying: "whoever pays the piper calls the tune": It is
> fair to question the ethics of civil society / non-profits accepting
> funding from companies that are notorious for deceptive and illegal
> activities - to the extent that even governments have labelled some as
> "digital gangsters". These companies are known for aggressively seeking to
> corrupt/influence policy and regulations all over the world to legitimize
> their harmful and exploitative practices. The companies are also known for
> purposefully applying unethical brainwashing techniques on mass scale to
> achieve their selfish ends. What is the perception created (and what are
> the risks) when such brands sponsor internet governance training?
>
> So unless we are saying it is OK for, say, as an illustrative example -
> NACADA (National Agency for the Campaign against Drug Abuse) to accept
> funding and partnership from Chang'aa dealers and Colombian drug lords to
> help deliver training on how to influence policies on illegal drugs... see
> what I mean?
>
> *3. Training Content, Pedagogical Quality and Delivery matters:* A
> training course on policy matters should be robustly and professionally
> developed (not just random calls for content), put through quality
> assurance controls (e.g. peer, industry and public reviews), followed by
> accreditation by credible institutions. It should also be delivered by
> qualified and credible instructors.
>
> To maximize its reach (and transparency), the course should delivered (or
> posted) online (videos + presentations + reference lists + graphics etc) on
> a freely accessible website/platform that allows learners to make public
> reviews and/or debates on the content. This user feedback can then feed
> into cycles of transparent and professional content improvement.
>
> This is different from simply publishing a post-event report (perhaps
> intended for donors so that more funding can be obtained?).
>
> *4. Transparency matters: *KICTANet being a multi-stakeholder forum that
> advocates for good governance on ICT related issues, should strive to live
> its own values. Besides being seen to be open to good-faith criticism,
> diversity of thought and freedom of expression, there should be visible
> efforts to demonstrate transparency, accountability and democratic ideals
> within its governance framework. This includes publishing annual plans,
> budgets (anticipated sources of funds and planned expenditure), annual
> audited accounts, and annual independent audit of governance structures.
>
> *5. Accountability matters:* It appears that KICTANet routinely receives
> funding from various sources. Where can we find KICTANet's audited transparency
> reports? The best practice for Non-profits is to publish audited
> Transparency Reports that show the sources and use funds. This helps
> identify potential conflicts of interest where there is risk of
> compromising values or neutrality. It also helps address corruption risks
> (e.g. turning public-interest initiatives into personal cash cows or
> officials being bribed to push hidden agendas that corrupt what would
> otherwise be good initiatives).
>
> *6. Conflict of interest matters:* To avoid perceptions that a
> multi-stakeholder organization has been hijacked by duplicitous agendas, or
> perceptions that officials may be using an organization (or its brand) to
> enrich themselves with sponsorship and donor funding, there need to be
> conflict of interest audits of the organization, its officials and its
> initiatives. No institution (whether public, private or non-profit) is
> immune to corruption - hence the need for institutionalized checks and
> balances. Also publicity initiatives should be seen to focus more on the
> message (or participants) and less on promoting the officials' personal
> brands.
>
> *6. Sustainability matters: *Let us use technology to promote
> re-usability and sustainability. Public-interest training courses should be
> digitized and published online for anyone to access.
>
> One major challenge with donor-funded initiatives is that they are always
> at risk of being turned into corruption cash cows - to the detriment of
> intended objectives. This leads to deceptive exploitation of other people's
> misfortunes - which is a cruel way of acquiring wealth.
>
> Other than lack of transparency and accountability, another sign of
> possible corruption in the non-profit sector is failure to implement *fairly
> obvious* sustainability measures (or ignoring advice to do so) - because,
> obviously, if a problem is solved there will be no more funding. This is
> why slums like Kibera / Mukuru etc never go away and why some NGOs are
> happy to deliver tablets to mud-walled/tin-structure schools that don't
> have desks or chairs or proper toilets or green playgrounds and have
> underpaid teachers and malnourished pupils.
>
> *7. Democracy matters in multi-stakeholder forums:* Sometimes, when
> officials serve for too long, they may perceive the organization as an
> extension of themselves (or as personal property) and become very sensitive
> to legitimate criticism - to the extent that they censor / clamp down on
> debate or aggressively muzzle their critics (e.g. via personal attacks or
> attempts to discredit the source).
>
> Usually this occurs there are no democratic governance structures or
> continued efforts to promote diversity of interests as well as diversity of
> thought within leadership.
>
> We need to start *honest conversations* about the need for *multi-stakeholder
> governance* in KICTANet via democratic ethos where governance, officials
> and roles are a fair representation of the *diversity *of
> multi-stakeholder settings. New leaders come in with fresh ideas, fresh
> strategies and new approaches.
>
> We also need to discuss the idea of student representation in the KICTANet
> leadership/trusteeship (one from TVET and one from University) - as a way
> of grooming future leaders - as well as representation from MSMEs that are
> not affiliated or dependent on corporations.
>
> This will help the network grow to new heights and achieve even more.
>
> Thank you and I look forward to a fruitful, and issues-focused discussion.
> Good day!
>
> Brgds,
> Patrick.
>
> Patrick A. M. Maina
> [Cross-domain Innovator | Independent Public Policy Analyst - Indigenous
> Innovations]
>
>
> On Wednesday, July 3, 2019, 7:42:23 PM GMT+3, Grace Bomu <
> nmutungu(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> In case you missed the link. Here it is.
> https://www.kictanet.or.ke/?page_id=40115
> You will find all the previous KeSIG reports.
>
> A brief background: Schools of internet governance (SIGs) are an offshoot
> of Internet Governance Fora (IGF). Internet governance fora are national
> and regional events that feed into the global UN hosted IGF. IGF is an
> annual soft law making event. It is multi stakeholder in its organisation
> and discussions.
>
> The Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG) is being held prior to the
> Kenya IGF. KeSIG runs from 29th -31st July while KIGF will be on 1st
> August. Like the global events, KeSIG and KIGF are also multistakeholder,
> bringing together the local community. While the event is sponsored by
> multiple stakeholders, it is convened by KICTANet.Infact, I am sure you
> will feature in the programme, should you have the time as you always bring
> a fresh view to our debates here. Please also see previous emails calling
> for volunteers to the KeSIG steering
> <https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/pipermail/kictanet/2019-June/034691.html>committee
> and KIGF
> <https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/pipermail/kictanet/2019-June/034680.html>.
> There is also a call for KIGF topics
> <https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/pipermail/kictanet/2019-July/034717.html>.
>
> Finally, we are very proud of Mwara, our Tech Policy Associate, whose
> journey begun from being a fellow at KeSIG. She is now the administrative
> lead in the 4th edition of the school. So KeSIG is also a training ground
> for youth.
>
> Warm regards,
>
>
> On Wed, 3 Jul 2019 at 19:20, Patrick A. M. Maina via kictanet <
> kictanet(a)lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
>
> Dear listers,
>
> When it comes to topics that can influence thought on policy issues, the
> line between training and indoctrination or brainwash becomes very thin -
> hence the need for vigilance, close scrutiny, transparency and *neutrality
> assurance* of (all) policy-related training initiatives.
>
> Some of the companies known to sponsor such events worldwide are notorious
> for aggressive lobbying on policy or governance issues, ostensibly:
>
> a. to try avoid impending regulation of their harmful/anti-social business
> models (or to distort accountability and responsibility narratives);
>
> b to try gain unfair advantage over government policy (and/or procurement)
> by corrupting rules, infiltrating and subverting public sector initiatives,
> or by peddling influence;
>
> c. to institutionalize, launder and/or officially entrench their
> socially/economically damaging profit models.
>
> A number of them have been accused by multiple governments, regulators,
> civil society, journalists, intellectuals, internet users (via class action
> lawsuits) and even their own former executives of using either unlawful or
> dishonest / grossly unethical business practices in ruthless pursuit of
> profit. Examples of these dubious practices include purposefully developing
> harmful/addiction-forming radicalizing online products targeted at young
> people, using deceptive tactics to grow or protect their businesses,
> infiltrating and subverting public education systems, subverting economies
> by capturing workers and learners attention, brazen disregard for people's
> privacy, unethical exploitation of private info, brazenly breaking laws or
> aggressively exploiting weak laws, exploiting public ignorance for profit
> and using predatory commercial strategies that are harmful to the public.
>
> The same companies, despite having BILLIONS in revenue, *agressively
> avoid* contributing their FAIR SHARE of taxes (sometimes to the extent of
> operating illegally, with impunity, in poor countries) - thus unfairly
> increasing the burden on governments and taxpayers to fund remediation for
> the indirect damage that these rogue companies cause e.g. damage to public
> health, subverting education, political instability, extremism and economic
> sabotage. These indirect, hidden burdens (negative externalities) can be
> socio-economically devastating - especially in developing economies, but
> are seldom recognized, highlighted, mitigated or attributed to the
> companies that are creating/amplifying them. The same companies then
> chicanerously manipulate the civil society (e.g. via training &
> sponsorship) to defend their commercial products as a "human right"!
>
> So depending on the sponsor(s), curriculum and governance framework, a
> training initiative could either be seen as legitimate training or a kind
> of backdoor indoctrination.
>
> This is why it is important to have full transparency and independent
> vetting of such sensitive initiatives (including sponsors, curriculum,
> tutors, accreditation etc).
>
> Also the use of the word "school" suggests an institution that has
> undergone formal vetting and accreditation. Yet when I look at the website,
> it ostensibly reads as if the "school" is an event. Questions:
>
> 1. Is it a school or is it an event?
>
> 2. Where is the school based?
>
> 3. Is it registered with relevant training oversight bodies?
>
> 4. Who are the lecturers and what are their credentials?
>
> 5. Who developed the coursework & what process was used? This is in view
> of high risk of content subversion due to powerful business interests
> having high conflicts of interest on policy and governance issues.
>
> 6. Is the school & coursework accredited? By which bodies?
>
> 7. Does it issue certificates?
>
> 8. How is the school/course funded? Does it have transparency reports?
> Where can they be found?
>
> 9. Who are the sponsors of this event/course?
>
> 10. How is conflict of interest avoided (currently and in the past)? Who
> audits & certifies neutrality?
>
> 11. By now such kinds of (potentially subjective) public-interest courses
> should have been put somewhere online for free and open access. This also
> allows for independent public scrutiny of the course content. How come this
> more transparent (and more pro-internet) approach has not yet been taken
> (despite big sponsors)?
>
> This is not to cast aspersions on this specific initiative but to point
> out, in good faith and in public interest, possible areas of risks or
> concern, so that they can be addressed or clarified. The issues above
> generally apply to any initiative(s) purporting to train stakeholders on
> policy and governance.
>
> Perhaps KICTANet officials can shed more light on the above issues please
> or point us to online resources that have the answers for each question
> above?
>
> Many thanks & have a blessed day.
>
> Patrick.
>
> Patrick A. M. Maina
> [Cross-domain Innovator | Independent Public Policy Analyst - Indigenous
> Innovations]
>
> On Wednesday, July 3, 2019, 12:24:28 PM GMT+3, mwara gichanga via kictanet
> <kictanet(a)lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
>
>
> Dear Listers
>
> The internet has become a vital platform for social, economic and
> political development in the world, and more increasing so here in Kenya.
> These bring about a lot of national interests around internet governance
> debates across all sectors .
>
> The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is pleased to welcome applications
> from those individuals interested in internet Governance for the 4th
> Edition of the Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG). KeSIG takes
> place prior to the Kenya IGF, with the aim of introducing beginners to
> basic concepts in internet policy making. This is with the goal of creating
> and increasing the available expertise for participation in local and
> global internet governance processes.
>
> Learn more about KeSIG HERE <https://www.kictanet.or.ke/?page_id=40115>
>
> Whether you are a policy maker, a researcher, a regulator, an engineer, a
> journalist, an entrepreneur or a human rights defender – if you are
> interested and want to get involved in internet policy and governance ,
> KeSIG is designed perfectly for you!
>
> KeSIG will take place over a 3-day course from the 29th-31st July 2019,
> with the deadline for submissions closing on 13th July 2019, and
> announcement of selected participants following soon after.
>
> Kindly access application form HERE <https://forms.gle/vCncJuuGSnowFUhNA>
>
> 4TH EDITION OF KENYA SCHOOL OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE(KESIG)
>
> KICTANet welcomes applications for fellows for the 4th Edition of the
> Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG...
> <https://forms.gle/vCncJuuGSnowFUhNA>
>
>
> For any further information or clarification , kindly email
> info(a)kictanet.or.ke or Mwara Gichanga mwaragichanga(a)kictanet.or.ke
>
> Warmly
>
> Mwara Gichanga
>
> Tech Policy Associate
>
> KICTANet
>
>
> _______________________________________________
> kictanet mailing list
> kictanet(a)lists.kictanet.or.ke
> https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/kictanet
> Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KICTANet/
>
> Unsubscribe or change your options at
> https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/pmaina2000%40yahoo.com
>
> The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform
> for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and
> regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT
> sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
>
> KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors
> online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth,
> share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do
> not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
> _______________________________________________
> kictanet mailing list
> kictanet(a)lists.kictanet.or.ke
> https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/listinfo/kictanet
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/kictanet
> Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/KICTANet/
>
> Unsubscribe or change your options at
> https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nmutungu%40gmail.com
>
> The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform
> for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and
> regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT
> sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
>
> KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors
> online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth,
> share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do
> not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
>
>
>
> --
> Grace Mutung'u
> Skype: gracebomu
> @Bomu
> PGP ID : 0x33A3450F
>
>
>
> --
> Grace Mutung'u
> Skype: gracebomu
> @Bomu
> PGP ID : 0x33A3450F
>
>
--
Grace Mutung'u
Skype: gracebomu
@Bomu
PGP ID : 0x33A3450F
1
0
Re: [kictanet] [who are the sponsors? Managing indoctrination risks...] CALL TO PARTICIPATE AT THE 4TH EDITION OF KENYA SCHOOL OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE (KESIG)
by Grace Bomu 04 Jul '19
by Grace Bomu 04 Jul '19
04 Jul '19
Patrick,
1. You raise high level policy issues which I will share with colleagues in
the global SIGs movement. Why do we use the word school? Why are we
non-conforming to the traditional methods of accreditation for training? I
think this comes from the (disruptive) history of internet policy making.
2. As regards the sources of funding, I totally get your fears. However, we
live in this community where each of the stakeholders is differently abled.
What we have is an understanding that KICTANet's role is to convene
meetings while the funders is to resource. I can assure you that there is
independence between the funders and content of the meetings. Indeed, the
KeSIG and KIGF strive for inclusive and meaningful views from all
stakeholder groups, including those that do not contribute resources.
Contribution in terms of policy ideas is just as highly regarded.
3. Our programme is based on Diplo Foundation's taxonomy of internet
governance issues with local adaptation. Please check out An Introduction
to Internet Governance by Jovan Kurbalija. If you read the 2016 KeSIG
report, you will also find the rationale for starting KeSIG- we had a lot
of people interested in internet governance who needed to learn the basics-
what is the internet, its history, Kenya's role in global policy making,
the actors etc.
4. Yes to all that. KICTANet as a network is about 10 years old but
KICTANet as an organisation is barely 3 years old. The current steering
team is doing great work in setting up the organisational structures with
the assistance of donors. Please check each KICTANet report for the
specific donors. As someone who has worked in this team, I am struck by the
strategy to get local companies to also support policy making work.
Although so far we have only received project based grants, I am sure that
future teams will be able to get more core support from these companies.
After all, this is our country and world to build.
5. absolutely. Please check KICTANet website for publications. You will
note that they are all enabled by the generosity of our partners. I am also
glad to note that the new kids of KICTANet are adopting video and other
more interesting methods to curate our experiences. PS: The new kids
introduced the idea of video while volunteering in the committees. They are
also very active and more comfortable with discussing policy on social
media as opposed to here.
6 &6. I am aware that the current team has been planning/looking for
resources for a community summit for the KICTANet community to meet and
discuss among others: organisational structure, succession and
sustainability. Look out for this. I welcome you to think of other models
for financial resource mobilisation. Should KICTANet community membership
be subscription based? What then do we do with members who have other
resources eg critical analysis? We also need policy makers because they
need to hear ideas as they develop even before they are formally presented
to them as policy proposals. Remember the diversity of stakeholders is
what makes KICTANet what it is.
7. We do have a lot of students at KICTANet, thanks to the many lecturers
who send them our way. Other students find their way from these calls we
make here. But our diversity is not limited to students. We also have
artistes (credit to them for videos), self taught programmers, designers
and other new age professionals. Please please come to KeSIG and see
KICTANet in action. I am sure you will appreciate some of the inner
workings more.
All the issues you raise are valid. But I also find that you are coming
from a sort of outsider perspective. This is by no means a disadvantage. On
the contrary, it would be great if you could contribute some time towards
the backend and bring your fresh ideas to work. So again, I invite you to
join one of the working groups or committees and share ideas for ongoing
programmes. But I warn you, it takes a lot of hours and dedication to
execute a programme. Infact, this is the reason I could not answer you
sooner.
I hope this sheds more light on your questions.
Warmly,
On Thu, 4 Jul 2019 at 09:02, Patrick A. M. Maina <pmaina2000(a)yahoo.com>
wrote:
> Thank you Grace for the constructive and calm response.
>
> The idea of offering training on policy is a good one - in principle -
> because, if properly implemented, it can help promote broader,
> intellectually diverse and meaningful engagement on important policy issues.
>
> My *good-faith concerns* are with the approach taken by certain
> initiatives - perhaps with "SIG" as an example. Let me offer some
> constructive suggestions to help build on the underlying idea and improve
> it (as well as ideas for broader improvements to KICTANet's governance
> framework):
>
> *1. Using the word "school" to market and EVENT can convey deceptive
> intent:* The word "school" has certain connotations (and its use may have
> legal implications); it creates certain automatic impressions, assumptions
> and expectations in peoples minds. Using the word to lends an aura of *pedagogical
> robustness* and *institutional credibility* to what appears to be
> essentially a partisan event/forum. This can be interpreted as deceptive
> advertising and might also be in conflict with education laws / regulations
> (lawyers can advise).
>
> Is it really necessary to rely on deception to attract participants? Why
> go to such lengths? The choice of deceptive branding (coupled with
> historical support from scandal ridden corporations) can send legitimate
> signals that the intention is to brainwash / indoctrinate participants -
> especially in the context of policy agendas.
>
> Unless I'm missing something... Could you please clarify the historical
> rationale for calling it a "school" and whether, in view of the above
> considerations, it would make sense to drop the word "school" and just call
> it what it really is: a potentially partisan discussion forum?
>
> Participants should be given a written *conflict of interest advisory*
> prior to the event so that they can contextualize the content's point of
> view (if there have not been any robust quality controls). This helps
> promote transparency.
>
> *2. The source of funding matters: *
>
> Examples:
> *a.* Consider the debate of whether religious institutions, the supposed
> custodians of our "core values", should accept contributions from dubious
> sources. Accepting the funds compromises the perceived moral authority of
> the institution thus destroying its credibility. It is also a form of moral
> laundering. Civil Society / Non-profits also face these challenges. They
> rely on donations to survive - but what happens when there is a conflict of
> values e.g. in cases where the donor is a known lawbreaker who pursues
> profit with disregard for ethics and against public-interest values?
>
> *b.* There is a saying: "whoever pays the piper calls the tune": It is
> fair to question the ethics of civil society / non-profits accepting
> funding from companies that are notorious for deceptive and illegal
> activities - to the extent that even governments have labelled some as
> "digital gangsters". These companies are known for aggressively seeking to
> corrupt/influence policy and regulations all over the world to legitimize
> their harmful and exploitative practices. The companies are also known for
> purposefully applying unethical brainwashing techniques on mass scale to
> achieve their selfish ends. What is the perception created (and what are
> the risks) when such brands sponsor internet governance training?
>
> So unless we are saying it is OK for, say, as an illustrative example -
> NACADA (National Agency for the Campaign against Drug Abuse) to accept
> funding and partnership from Chang'aa dealers and Colombian drug lords to
> help deliver training on how to influence policies on illegal drugs... see
> what I mean?
>
> *3. Training Content, Pedagogical Quality and Delivery matters:* A
> training course on policy matters should be robustly and professionally
> developed (not just random calls for content), put through quality
> assurance controls (e.g. peer, industry and public reviews), followed by
> accreditation by credible institutions. It should also be delivered by
> qualified and credible instructors.
>
> To maximize its reach (and transparency), the course should delivered (or
> posted) online (videos + presentations + reference lists + graphics etc) on
> a freely accessible website/platform that allows learners to make public
> reviews and/or debates on the content. This user feedback can then feed
> into cycles of transparent and professional content improvement.
>
> This is different from simply publishing a post-event report (perhaps
> intended for donors so that more funding can be obtained?).
>
> *4. Transparency matters: *KICTANet being a multi-stakeholder forum that
> advocates for good governance on ICT related issues, should strive to live
> its own values. Besides being seen to be open to good-faith criticism,
> diversity of thought and freedom of expression, there should be visible
> efforts to demonstrate transparency, accountability and democratic ideals
> within its governance framework. This includes publishing annual plans,
> budgets (anticipated sources of funds and planned expenditure), annual
> audited accounts, and annual independent audit of governance structures.
>
> *5. Accountability matters:* It appears that KICTANet routinely receives
> funding from various sources. Where can we find KICTANet's audited transparency
> reports? The best practice for Non-profits is to publish audited
> Transparency Reports that show the sources and use funds. This helps
> identify potential conflicts of interest where there is risk of
> compromising values or neutrality. It also helps address corruption risks
> (e.g. turning public-interest initiatives into personal cash cows or
> officials being bribed to push hidden agendas that corrupt what would
> otherwise be good initiatives).
>
> *6. Conflict of interest matters:* To avoid perceptions that a
> multi-stakeholder organization has been hijacked by duplicitous agendas, or
> perceptions that officials may be using an organization (or its brand) to
> enrich themselves with sponsorship and donor funding, there need to be
> conflict of interest audits of the organization, its officials and its
> initiatives. No institution (whether public, private or non-profit) is
> immune to corruption - hence the need for institutionalized checks and
> balances. Also publicity initiatives should be seen to focus more on the
> message (or participants) and less on promoting the officials' personal
> brands.
>
> *6. Sustainability matters: *Let us use technology to promote
> re-usability and sustainability. Public-interest training courses should be
> digitized and published online for anyone to access.
>
> One major challenge with donor-funded initiatives is that they are always
> at risk of being turned into corruption cash cows - to the detriment of
> intended objectives. This leads to deceptive exploitation of other people's
> misfortunes - which is a cruel way of acquiring wealth.
>
> Other than lack of transparency and accountability, another sign of
> possible corruption in the non-profit sector is failure to implement *fairly
> obvious* sustainability measures (or ignoring advice to do so) - because,
> obviously, if a problem is solved there will be no more funding. This is
> why slums like Kibera / Mukuru etc never go away and why some NGOs are
> happy to deliver tablets to mud-walled/tin-structure schools that don't
> have desks or chairs or proper toilets or green playgrounds and have
> underpaid teachers and malnourished pupils.
>
> *7. Democracy matters in multi-stakeholder forums:* Sometimes, when
> officials serve for too long, they may perceive the organization as an
> extension of themselves (or as personal property) and become very sensitive
> to legitimate criticism - to the extent that they censor / clamp down on
> debate or aggressively muzzle their critics (e.g. via personal attacks or
> attempts to discredit the source).
>
> Usually this occurs there are no democratic governance structures or
> continued efforts to promote diversity of interests as well as diversity of
> thought within leadership.
>
> We need to start *honest conversations* about the need for *multi-stakeholder
> governance* in KICTANet via democratic ethos where governance, officials
> and roles are a fair representation of the *diversity *of
> multi-stakeholder settings. New leaders come in with fresh ideas, fresh
> strategies and new approaches.
>
> We also need to discuss the idea of student representation in the KICTANet
> leadership/trusteeship (one from TVET and one from University) - as a way
> of grooming future leaders - as well as representation from MSMEs that are
> not affiliated or dependent on corporations.
>
> This will help the network grow to new heights and achieve even more.
>
> Thank you and I look forward to a fruitful, and issues-focused discussion.
> Good day!
>
> Brgds,
> Patrick.
>
> Patrick A. M. Maina
> [Cross-domain Innovator | Independent Public Policy Analyst - Indigenous
> Innovations]
>
>
> On Wednesday, July 3, 2019, 7:42:23 PM GMT+3, Grace Bomu <
> nmutungu(a)gmail.com> wrote:
>
>
> In case you missed the link. Here it is.
> https://www.kictanet.or.ke/?page_id=40115
> You will find all the previous KeSIG reports.
>
> A brief background: Schools of internet governance (SIGs) are an offshoot
> of Internet Governance Fora (IGF). Internet governance fora are national
> and regional events that feed into the global UN hosted IGF. IGF is an
> annual soft law making event. It is multi stakeholder in its organisation
> and discussions.
>
> The Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG) is being held prior to the
> Kenya IGF. KeSIG runs from 29th -31st July while KIGF will be on 1st
> August. Like the global events, KeSIG and KIGF are also multistakeholder,
> bringing together the local community. While the event is sponsored by
> multiple stakeholders, it is convened by KICTANet.Infact, I am sure you
> will feature in the programme, should you have the time as you always bring
> a fresh view to our debates here. Please also see previous emails calling
> for volunteers to the KeSIG steering
> <https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/pipermail/kictanet/2019-June/034691.html>committee
> and KIGF
> <https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/pipermail/kictanet/2019-June/034680.html>.
> There is also a call for KIGF topics
> <https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/pipermail/kictanet/2019-July/034717.html>.
>
> Finally, we are very proud of Mwara, our Tech Policy Associate, whose
> journey begun from being a fellow at KeSIG. She is now the administrative
> lead in the 4th edition of the school. So KeSIG is also a training ground
> for youth.
>
> Warm regards,
>
>
> On Wed, 3 Jul 2019 at 19:20, Patrick A. M. Maina via kictanet <
> kictanet(a)lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
>
> Dear listers,
>
> When it comes to topics that can influence thought on policy issues, the
> line between training and indoctrination or brainwash becomes very thin -
> hence the need for vigilance, close scrutiny, transparency and *neutrality
> assurance* of (all) policy-related training initiatives.
>
> Some of the companies known to sponsor such events worldwide are notorious
> for aggressive lobbying on policy or governance issues, ostensibly:
>
> a. to try avoid impending regulation of their harmful/anti-social business
> models (or to distort accountability and responsibility narratives);
>
> b to try gain unfair advantage over government policy (and/or procurement)
> by corrupting rules, infiltrating and subverting public sector initiatives,
> or by peddling influence;
>
> c. to institutionalize, launder and/or officially entrench their
> socially/economically damaging profit models.
>
> A number of them have been accused by multiple governments, regulators,
> civil society, journalists, intellectuals, internet users (via class action
> lawsuits) and even their own former executives of using either unlawful or
> dishonest / grossly unethical business practices in ruthless pursuit of
> profit. Examples of these dubious practices include purposefully developing
> harmful/addiction-forming radicalizing online products targeted at young
> people, using deceptive tactics to grow or protect their businesses,
> infiltrating and subverting public education systems, subverting economies
> by capturing workers and learners attention, brazen disregard for people's
> privacy, unethical exploitation of private info, brazenly breaking laws or
> aggressively exploiting weak laws, exploiting public ignorance for profit
> and using predatory commercial strategies that are harmful to the public.
>
> The same companies, despite having BILLIONS in revenue, *agressively
> avoid* contributing their FAIR SHARE of taxes (sometimes to the extent of
> operating illegally, with impunity, in poor countries) - thus unfairly
> increasing the burden on governments and taxpayers to fund remediation for
> the indirect damage that these rogue companies cause e.g. damage to public
> health, subverting education, political instability, extremism and economic
> sabotage. These indirect, hidden burdens (negative externalities) can be
> socio-economically devastating - especially in developing economies, but
> are seldom recognized, highlighted, mitigated or attributed to the
> companies that are creating/amplifying them. The same companies then
> chicanerously manipulate the civil society (e.g. via training &
> sponsorship) to defend their commercial products as a "human right"!
>
> So depending on the sponsor(s), curriculum and governance framework, a
> training initiative could either be seen as legitimate training or a kind
> of backdoor indoctrination.
>
> This is why it is important to have full transparency and independent
> vetting of such sensitive initiatives (including sponsors, curriculum,
> tutors, accreditation etc).
>
> Also the use of the word "school" suggests an institution that has
> undergone formal vetting and accreditation. Yet when I look at the website,
> it ostensibly reads as if the "school" is an event. Questions:
>
> 1. Is it a school or is it an event?
>
> 2. Where is the school based?
>
> 3. Is it registered with relevant training oversight bodies?
>
> 4. Who are the lecturers and what are their credentials?
>
> 5. Who developed the coursework & what process was used? This is in view
> of high risk of content subversion due to powerful business interests
> having high conflicts of interest on policy and governance issues.
>
> 6. Is the school & coursework accredited? By which bodies?
>
> 7. Does it issue certificates?
>
> 8. How is the school/course funded? Does it have transparency reports?
> Where can they be found?
>
> 9. Who are the sponsors of this event/course?
>
> 10. How is conflict of interest avoided (currently and in the past)? Who
> audits & certifies neutrality?
>
> 11. By now such kinds of (potentially subjective) public-interest courses
> should have been put somewhere online for free and open access. This also
> allows for independent public scrutiny of the course content. How come this
> more transparent (and more pro-internet) approach has not yet been taken
> (despite big sponsors)?
>
> This is not to cast aspersions on this specific initiative but to point
> out, in good faith and in public interest, possible areas of risks or
> concern, so that they can be addressed or clarified. The issues above
> generally apply to any initiative(s) purporting to train stakeholders on
> policy and governance.
>
> Perhaps KICTANet officials can shed more light on the above issues please
> or point us to online resources that have the answers for each question
> above?
>
> Many thanks & have a blessed day.
>
> Patrick.
>
> Patrick A. M. Maina
> [Cross-domain Innovator | Independent Public Policy Analyst - Indigenous
> Innovations]
>
> On Wednesday, July 3, 2019, 12:24:28 PM GMT+3, mwara gichanga via kictanet
> <kictanet(a)lists.kictanet.or.ke> wrote:
>
>
> Dear Listers
>
> The internet has become a vital platform for social, economic and
> political development in the world, and more increasing so here in Kenya.
> These bring about a lot of national interests around internet governance
> debates across all sectors .
>
> The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is pleased to welcome applications
> from those individuals interested in internet Governance for the 4th
> Edition of the Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG). KeSIG takes
> place prior to the Kenya IGF, with the aim of introducing beginners to
> basic concepts in internet policy making. This is with the goal of creating
> and increasing the available expertise for participation in local and
> global internet governance processes.
>
> Learn more about KeSIG HERE <https://www.kictanet.or.ke/?page_id=40115>
>
> Whether you are a policy maker, a researcher, a regulator, an engineer, a
> journalist, an entrepreneur or a human rights defender – if you are
> interested and want to get involved in internet policy and governance ,
> KeSIG is designed perfectly for you!
>
> KeSIG will take place over a 3-day course from the 29th-31st July 2019,
> with the deadline for submissions closing on 13th July 2019, and
> announcement of selected participants following soon after.
>
> Kindly access application form HERE <https://forms.gle/vCncJuuGSnowFUhNA>
>
> 4TH EDITION OF KENYA SCHOOL OF INTERNET GOVERNANCE(KESIG)
>
> KICTANet welcomes applications for fellows for the 4th Edition of the
> Kenya School of Internet Governance (KeSIG...
> <https://forms.gle/vCncJuuGSnowFUhNA>
>
>
> For any further information or clarification , kindly email
> info(a)kictanet.or.ke or Mwara Gichanga mwaragichanga(a)kictanet.or.ke
>
> Warmly
>
> Mwara Gichanga
>
> Tech Policy Associate
>
> KICTANet
>
>
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>
> The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform
> for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and
> regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT
> sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
>
> KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors
> online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth,
> share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do
> not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
> _______________________________________________
> kictanet mailing list
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>
> Unsubscribe or change your options at
> https://lists.kictanet.or.ke/mailman/options/kictanet/nmutungu%40gmail.com
>
> The Kenya ICT Action Network (KICTANet) is a multi-stakeholder platform
> for people and institutions interested and involved in ICT policy and
> regulation. The network aims to act as a catalyst for reform in the ICT
> sector in support of the national aim of ICT enabled growth and development.
>
> KICTANetiquette : Adhere to the same standards of acceptable behaviors
> online that you follow in real life: respect people's times and bandwidth,
> share knowledge, don't flame or abuse or personalize, respect privacy, do
> not spam, do not market your wares or qualifications.
>
>
>
> --
> Grace Mutung'u
> Skype: gracebomu
> @Bomu
> PGP ID : 0x33A3450F
>
>
--
Grace Mutung'u
Skype: gracebomu
@Bomu
PGP ID : 0x33A3450F
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