Lastly, it is important, on occasion, for us (within ICANN) to
remember that our internal language will have different meanings
in different contexts. That is especially important when outreach
includes awareness raising and greater engagement in Internet
ecosystem issues from "their perspective", which for NPOC means a
focus more on Civil Society at the organization level, while not
ignoring the issues of individuals in Civil Society. This is in
addition to ICANN's interest in Civil Society's greater engagement
in ICANN's multistakeholder processes.
Hope that helps clear some things up a bit.
Sam L.
[log in to unmask]" type="cite">Hi Sam,
Unfortunately, this webinar will take place midway through constituency day, so it’ll be pretty difficult for those who wish to participate in their own groups’ meetings (either in person or remotely) to attend the webinar.
I am certainly interested to listen in, and will try to in the future. One of the topics I find to be of great interest is brand protection. I find the mix of civil society online, domain names and brand protection to be more than just a little odd. Now I’m not saying that protection of brands is a bad thing, but when it comes to gTLD policies, I have found that achieving almost all of the goals that I have come to believe are important to civil society put us in direct conflict with the interests of brand owners.
I would assume (and hope) that there is some way for civil society to approach this issue differently than the Intellectual Property Constituency (IPC), but it looks like one of the presenters of this topic is actually one of the IPC’s GNSO councillors.
Will there be a recording of the webinar? Like I said, I’d be very interested to hear more on this.
Thanks.
Amr
On Feb 3, 2015, at 1:41 PM, Sam Lanfranco <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
Singapore Pathfinder Webinar Program
"What every Civil Society Organization should Know about
its use of the Internet and Never Dared to Ask! - Part 2"(South East Asia Regional Webinar)
Date & Time: February 10, 2015 11:30-13:00 SGT (3:30-5:00 UTC)
Event Location: Moor Room, Raffles City Convention Centre, Singapore
Civil Society and Non-Governmental Organizations are the Internet’s largest stakeholder group, and they are becoming increasingly dependent on how the Internet operates in order to carry out work in pursuit of their vision and Mission.
This regional Pathfinder webinars and dialogues series is designed to address vital operational concerns, explore challenges and present effective strategic uses of the Internet by Civil Society and NGO organizations. Presenters from Internet stakeholder groups will address issues that directly impact Civil Society organization use of the Internet. This is Pathfinder’s second regional session. The first was in Washington D.C. in early January. There are more to follow. Pathfinder is an initiative of the Global Knowledge Partnership Foundation . This South East Asia Regional Webinar is hosted by ICANN’s Not-For-Profit Operational Concerns Constituency (NPOC) with assistance from Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP (Washington D.C.) and the Alpha & Omega Law Corporation (Singapore)
Topic 1: "Making it work for you: Emerging Opportunities and Challenges for Civil Society Organizations on the Internet"
Presenter: Sam Lanfranco, Chair, NPOC Policy Committee; Chair, ISOC-Canada Public Policy Committee
Topic 2: "Civil Society Online: Domain Names, Brand Protection and Abuse Prevention"
Presenters: Renee Xavier, Director, Alpha & Omega Law Firm (Singapore); Brian J. Winterfeldt, Head of Internet Practice, Katten Muchin Rosenman LLP (Washington D.C.)
Topic 3: "ICANN's Role in Civil Society Organization Internet Opportunities and Challenges"
Presenters: Jean-Jacques Sahel, Civil Society Engagement, ICANN; Nigel Hickson, IG matters, ICANN
Moderator: Rudi Vansnick, Chair, Not-for-Profit Operational Concerns Constituency (NPOC)
For information on remote participation and questions see: http://www.gkpf.org/portal.php?p=webinarSg150210