On the CFP08 blog, Laura DeNardis of the Yale Internet and Society Project writes:
To help shape public debate in this election year, the Information Society Project at Yale Law School recommends the following policy principles – The 9.5 Theses for Technology Policy in the Next Administration
The principles include Privacy, Access, Network Neutrality, Transparency, Culture, Diversity, and Openness. The intent here is that these are starting points for a discussion; threads between now and CFP will delve into the individual principles, and I’ve already put them up on the wiki to allow for revision.
There’s certainly a lot of good stuff here. Since at this stage we’re trying to get the conversation started, I’ve instead been focusing on some areas I thought had room for improvement, for example asking in a comment*
why does diversity mention only media concentration, and ignore the general dynamic in which marginalized groups (women, persons of color, those on the wrong side of the digital divide … the list goes on) have been excluded from discussions like these?
It’s an interesting discussion so far; please check it out and join in!
jon
* the actual comment I left there had a few typos as well; I fixed them here.
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