Dear Routing WG,

Recent public debates on the ethics and social implications of digital 
technology, as well as the feedback I received on my presentation at RIPE77 
[0], have stimulated me to think more about how value frameworks can inform 
routing decisions. 

Based on the analysis of several discussions in the IETF community [1], the 
ICANN community [2], and the recent book by David Clarke [3], I thought a 
voluntary declaration of values might be relevant for discussion in the RIPE 
community. A way of doing this could be the discussion of the introduction of 
two AS-SET objects in the routing database. This could enable Autonomous 
Systems to declare the values frameworks they adhere to. An example of possible 
objects would be:

[object0]
as-set: AS-GDPR
remarks: members of this set declare to be compliant with the General Data 
Protection Regulation of the European Union
mbrs-by-ref: ANY
[/object0]

[object1]
as-set: AS-UNGP
remarks: members of this set declare to have adopted and implemented the United 
Nations Guiding Principles on Business and Human Rights
mbrs-by-ref: ANY
[/object1]

Members of these sets would declare to live up to these values. Based on these 
sets, other AS-es could, for example, choose to preferentially route via AS-es 
that are member of (one of) these sets. 

These value frameworks (the GDPR and UNGPs) were chosen because these are 
widely known and adopted standards in our community [4], so the understanding 
of these values should not be subject to a lot of interpretation and 
discussion. 

Do you think this would be a reasonable approach, and if so, in what ways could 
these objects be used to route traffic? Or would there be better ways to route 
traffic based on the values of AS-es?

Looking forward to hear what you think.

Best,

Niels

PS I posted a similar e-mail to the database WG to discuss the implications for 
the database. Please accept my apologies if this is considered as 
cross-posting, but I thought both aspects of this proposal might be interesting 
to discuss.

[0] https://ripe77.ripe.net/archives/video/2113/
[1] For instance in the discussions on RFC1958, RFC3935, RFC6873, RFC7258, and 
RFC8280
[2] Most notably resulting in the addition of a commitment to human rights 
during the IANA transition, but of course as well during the extensive WHOIS 
discussions
[3] https://mitpress.mit.edu/books/designing-internet
[4] For instance SIDN has engaged in a Human Rights Impact Assessment 
https://www.sidn.nl/a/over-sidn/mensenrechten-daar-voldoen-we-toch-aan , and 
Cisco, Ericsson, Google, NTT, Orange, AT&T, IBM and many others have adopted 
the UNGPs https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/cisco-systems-0
 - Cisco https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/cisco-systems-0?keywords=cisco
 - Ericsson 
https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/ericsson-0?keywords=ericsson#a117755
 - Google https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/google-0?keywords=google
 - NTT 
https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/nippon-telegraph-and-telephone-ntt-group-0
 http://www.ntt.co.jp/csr_e/report.html
 - Orange https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/orange-0
 - AT&T https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/att-0?keywords=AT&T
 - IBM https://www.business-humanrights.org/en/ibm-0?keywords=IBM 

-- 
Niels ten Oever
Researcher and PhD Candidate
Datactive Research Group
University of Amsterdam

PGP fingerprint    2458 0B70 5C4A FD8A 9488  
                   643A 0ED8 3F3A 468A C8B3

Reply via email to