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DEMOCRACY
Internet role in human rights gets spotlight
by Staff Writers
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 25, 2011


Technology titans and political activists are grappling with how to make social responsibility and human rights part of the fabric of doing business on the Internet.

A Silicon Valley Human Rights Conference will wrap Wednesday in San Francisco after two days of networking and brainstorming regarding how to ensure that the Internet is a tool for human rights instead of a weapon of oppression.

"Today we face a series of challenges to the intersections of human rights, connected technology, and government," said Michael Posner, US assistant secretary of state for the bureau of democracy, human rights and labor.

"It is a busy intersection and a lot of people want to put up traffic lights," he continued in a keynote presentation.

The goal of the conference was to collaborate on principles for entrepreneurs to balance pursuit of profit with making sure their creations are used for social good instead of evil.

"Silicon Valley has always been the epicenter of technological innovation," said conference organizer Brett Solomon.

"But now it is also a digital beacon of hope," he said. "From the creation of the chip to the writing of the code... we can commit together to make sure the technologies are a force for good."

Engineers, entrepreneurs, and executives joined with political analysts, activists, and charity groups to delve into the vital role that the Internet plays in social reform.

Sponsors of the gathering include Google, Facebook, Skype, Mozilla and Yahoo!

"I view the Internet as the greatest opportunity to advance human rights in our lifetime," Facebook vice president of global communication and public policy Elliot Schrage told attendees. "The Internet gives people a voice, and we need to make sure it stays that way."

Threats targeted at the conference included Western technology firms cooperating with governments to censor what is shared on the Internet or track down people disliked by authorities.

"The bottom line is: we're here because of the actions of governments," Google public policy director Bob Boorstin said.

"It's not just repressive regimes, but democratic ones too," he said. "We know more than 40 regimes that are actively blocking content around the world."

Google on Tuesday updated its online Transparency Report to provide the public with more insights into government requests for information about its users and demands that it remove content from its services.

"Like other technology and communications companies, Google regularly receives requests from government agencies and courts around the world to remove content from our services and hand over user data," Google said.

In the first six months of this year, US courts and law enforcement made 5,950 requests for data on users, Google said, 93 percent of which were fully or partially complied with. Most requests involved criminal investigations.

India was next with 1,739 data requests, 70 percent of which were fully or partially complied with, Google said.

Google said officials in India also asked for the removal of YouTube videos showing protests against social leaders or containing offensive language aimed at religious leaders. Most of the requests were denied.

China asked that 121 items be removed from Google during the same period.

Western countries that ramped up the number of requests for Google to take down items included Britain, France, Germany, and Spain, according to the Mountain View, California-based company.

Among the hot conference topics was how much regulation is appropriate for objectives ranging from net neutrality to protecting copyrights or fighting crime.

"We saw the British government fantasizing about a kill switch and witnessed the implications of the Patriot Act in the United States," European Parliament member Marietje Schaake of the Netherlands said in a video.

"I'm against over regulating this space when it is not needed, but we may need we may need regulation to keep it open to competition," she continued.

Craigslist founder Craig Newmark saw the world at a tipping point where democracy was working, sometimes painfully, thanks to the Internet.

"The street finds its own uses for technology and I'm pretty happy if we could just avoid getting in the way," Newmark said during a panel discussion of Internet regulation.

"It is more important to use the Internet to give a voice to people who never have a voice and give a break to people who never get a break," he concluded.

Related Links
Democracy in the 21st century at TerraDaily.com




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Ex-minister slams 'degradation' of Russia politics
Moscow (AFP) Oct 26, 2011 - An ex-cabinet minister who now heads the state nanotechnology firm, on Wednesday told a glitzy congress including President Dmitry Medvedev that political life in Russia had degraded.

Anatoly Chubais, who was the father of Russia's controversial privatisation programme under president Boris Yeltsin in the 1990s, bluntly said there was a gulf between the country's weak political development and its economic progress.

His comments marked a rare negative comment by a heavyweight figure about the political situation in Russia under strongman Vladimir Putin. Most officials carefully toe the line, especially at major occasions.

Explosively, Chubais also suggested that the contrast between the economic development and political stagnation could not continue for much longer.

"In the last years economic life in Russia has developed. But political life has degraded. As I understand it, this situation cannot last long," Chubais told a forum organised by his Rosnano nanotechnology corporation.

"Sooner or later these two processes, which are the two sides of the same coin, have to complement each other," he told the congress, the Interfax news agency reported.

Chubais did not go into further details but his outspoken remarks came after last month's announcement that Putin would stand again for the Kremlin in 2012 polls dashed hopes of swift political change in Russia.

Medvedev, who has failed to turn pledges of radical reform into meaningful action, is set to take Putin's current job of prime minister when his mentor returns to the Kremlin.

Chubais is one of the last survivors from the era of radical reform in the 1990s under Yeltsin which was spearheaded by the late economist Yegor Gaidar.

However the red-haired official remains a figure of hate for many Russians over the decision to sell prize state assets at knock-down prices to an elite group of well-connected oligarchs.



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DEMOCRACY
Kirchner celebrates re-election landslide in Argentina
Buenos Aires (AFP) Oct 24, 2011
President Cristina Kirchner celebrated a landslide re-election victory in Argentine elections Monday, on the back of booming economic growth and sympathy a year after the death of her husband. "I'm the first woman to be re-elected president. I don't want anything more," the center-left politician said in an emotional speech in Buenos Aires, after partial results gave her more than 53 percent ... read more


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