*** Democracies Online Newswire - http://www.e-democracy.org/do ***


An Internet of Democracy

Published in Vol. 43, No. 11 November, 2000 of the
Communications of the ACM (CACM), a publication of the
Association for Computing (ACM).

By Steven Clift
http://www.publicus.net
Copyright 2000 - Permission to forward via e-mail automatically
granted with cc: to <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>.

* Are you a pro-democracy techie? Join the Democracies Online
* peer group for technically-minded individuals interested in
* making their skills available to e-democracy efforts around
* the world. E-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> to join.
* Not a techie? Join DO-WIRE from <http://e-democracy.org/do>.



Here I sit with my laptop on a park bench outside of
Independence Hall in Philadelphia, ah, the wonders and hype of
modern technology. It was here that the American Declaration of
Independence was signed in 1776.

To write about the use of information and communication
technology and democracy requires not a hyper-speed view that
everything will change in the next two years. Rather it is the
principles we establish and the actions we take now that will
set the course for the next two hundred years of democracy in
the information age. We must ask ourselves - Do we want to build
the Internet into the very nature our many democracies? Or will
we maintain the default course where democracy is a burdensome
add-on and side application that happens to run on the Internet?
Just as we spend time and resources to make the Internet safe
for e-commerce, shouldn't we do the same for e-democracy?

Back in 1994, I thought that I invented the term "e-democracy."
I was into democracy, e-mail, and Minnesota politics. That
election year a group of volunteers created Minnesota E-
Democracy <http://www.e-democracy.org>, the world's first
election-oriented web site. "E-mail" or "electronic" combined
with "democracy" made "e-democracy." In recent years I
discovered an article from 1987 that used the term, but the
point is that citizen spontaneously built something new on top
of one of the most important institutions of humankind -
democracy. We rolled up our sleeves and did the work required to
move beyond the hype toward real results.

While I continue to volunteer with Minnesota E-Democracy, I am
also involved in the "convergence of democracy and the Internet"
around the world through my Democracies Online effort. I
recognize that the social, political, and economic differences
in countries, even communities around the world result in many
different democracies. Despite these dynamic differences, forms
of representation and public decision-making are pulling the
Internet and other information and communication technologies
into the heart of what they do. However, from parliaments and
local councils to civil society and media groups, the sectors of
democracy are primarily focused on the end applications and not
the fundamental infrastructure of the Internet.

We need a generation of civic technologists who engage the
fundamental infrastructure of the Internet and standards
processes in the public interest. We need talented people with
an eye toward making the Internet a democracy network by nature.
Just as hyper-text transfer protocols and mark-up languages
enable freer speech, what standards could assist electronic free
association or geographic-based Internet content navigation?
Meaningful online speech only seems to occur where people can
form sustained audiences or within active online communities.
Real democracy is also fundamentally based on geography, yet web
sites are incredibly difficult to navigate and search based
making it difficult for people to find information relevant to
local community issues.

As I have tracked the Internet Engineer Task Force and other
technical groups it is clear that you must have "standing" to
contribute or influence these technical meritocracies. It is not
enough to feel something should be done and there is no
expectation that anyone has a right of representation. Those who
want an Internet that works naturally in the public interest and
democracy must be engaged with merit in both the development and
promotion of Internet standards. We need civic-minded
technologists who not only encourage technical developments but
also take a lead in developing technical solutions and
applications to gain respect, acceptance and power within the
Internet's meritocracy. We need to not only state the
justification for a standard or open source solution, but also
write and code solutions that make our technical goals a
reality.

Let me be bit more specific. Some of the projects and ideas I'd
like to see include:

    * Open Group <http://opengroups.org> - This is my first
    attempt to introduce the development of a technical effort
    with revolutionary implications for public online
    communities and free electronic association. I have found
    through experience that most transformative aspect of the
    Internet in democracy is many-to-many communication. While
    the vast majority of online communities have nothing to do
    with political issues or local community affairs, many do.
    The problem is that it is almost impossible for the average
    Internet user to find, evaluate or join these forums. Open
    Groups would create an XML standard for describing online
    groups, the ability to integrate this standard into e-mail
    list, web forum, and chat server software as well a
    mechanism to gather and share this data.

    * Representative Democracy Online Toolkit - This set of
    applications would seek to use Internet standards and open
    source software where possible to aide the integration of
    the Internet into formal representative processes. While
    not fundamentally designed to create new Internet
    standards, it would be focused on using Internet-style
    collaboration across governments and academic centers to
    build inexpensive and robust software tools for
    representative bodies around the world. Example
    applications might include E-mail Response, an advanced
    incoming e-mail filtering and response aide, Virtual
    Hearing, a system that enables physical public hearings to
    be made fully available in real-time online (including
    handouts and support materials) as well as allow
    Internet-based testimony, and Public Notice, a system to
    announce all public meetings and agendas online within a
    given geographic jurisdiction.

    * Digital Datacasting <http://www.publicus.net/pi/> - With
    digital television emerging around the world, the
    opportunity to provide universal access to the most
    essential public service information is upon us. Along the
    lines of teletext in Europe and the public access cable
    television model in the United States, datacasting of text,
    images, audio, and video as part of the DTV broadcast
    stream will make the best of the public Internet content
    available to those without a two-way Internet connection.
    It will also allow the television and set-top box to be
    used for quick access to important government and community
    information such as missing children alerts, crime alerts,
    weather warnings, school lunch menus, community calendars,
    and in places like Minnesota - snow emergency warnings so
    your car doesn't get towed when they plow the streets. To
    build such a standards based effort will require
    substantial development and political resources to merge
    the best of Internet development with the controversial
    area of broadcast standards and regulations.


These are just a few of the ideas I have with significant
technical requirements. I am sure you have many more. From the
signing of the Declaration of Independence it took eleven years
until the U.S. Constitution was signed in the building in front
of me. Those who care about "e-democracy" need to move from our
declarations of interests and ideals and now shape the
Internet=92s standards-based constitution. We want an Internet
that technically supports the nature of the democracies we want
so the individual and group freedoms, rights, and
responsibilities required to build a better world are the
foundation and not the exception of the digital era.

I often refer to myself as a "radical incrementalist." I believe
that we need to take small actions based on our ideal of what
the Internet ought to be or could be now instead of waiting for
it to happen all at once based on some grand plan. As
"E-Citizens" we can take action in our own communities as well
as globally in Internet technical circles. Let us contribute by
sharing our successes and failures with our peers along the way
and build an Internet that is "of" democracy and not settle for
surviving remnants of current democracy struggling to simply
exist "on" an anti-democratic Internet.

                        *     *     *

Need an HTML version of this article? See:
http://www.publicus.net/articles/netdem.html


Steven Clift is the editor of the Democracies Online Newswire
<http://e-democracy.org/do>, an Internet e-mail announcement
list with over 1700 subscribers interested in the "convergence
of democracies and the Internet around the world." He has spoken
in 19 countries on these topics and has a working draft of his
"E-Democracy E-Book" available online from
<http://publicus.net>.


* Are you a pro-democracy techie? Join the Democracies Online
* peer group for technically-minded individuals interested in
* making their skills available to e-democracy efforts around
* the world. E-mail <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> to join.
* Not a techie? Join DO-WIRE from <http://e-democracy.org/do>.


^               ^               ^                ^
Steven L. Clift    -    W: http://www.publicus.net
Minneapolis    -   -   -     E: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Minnesota  -   -   -   -   -    T: +1.612.822.8667
USA    -   -   -   -   -   -   -     ICQ: 13789183


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