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CPSR conference brings people and Internet together



CPSR conference brings people and Internet together
by Andy Oram
Oct. 7, 2002


The Internet never looked this way from Harvard Square before. The 
2002 annual meeting of Computer Professionals for Social 
Responsibility this past Saturday left the 75 participants 
enlightened and wildly excited about giving control over information 
to poor people all around the world. I arrived home at ten o'clock at 
night and told my wife, "You're lucky I didn't sign up to spend a 
month in Malawi installing Linux." 

The title of the annual meeting was "Shrinking World, Expanding Net", 
a title that nimbly conveyed the dual (and perhaps dueling) trends 
within an Internet that is quickly becoming a commodity. 

On the one hand, Internet access is being extended to geographic 
regions and demographic groups where recently it was considered 
unfeasible. As access spreads, the new nodes take on characteristics 
totally foreign to the original users in the developed world: 
characteristics adapted to poor connectivity, low bandwidth, problems 
with literacy, and a diversity of cultural conditions. 

On the other hand, as people realize the Internet's importance, 
pressures increase to impose some predictability on it, while the 
pursuit of democracy and community development online gains support. 

Here is a summary of the day's events, including the ceremony 
awarding the annual Norbert Wiener Award to networking engineer and 
ICANN Board member Karl Auerbach: 

Development 
Human rights 
Global representation 
ICANN 
Miscellaneous 

The workshop was expertly assembled and carried off in the belly of 
the beast, Harvard University's Kennedy School of Government, by 
Kennedy School professor L. Jean Camp and a dozen student volunteers. 
(To their credit, the Kennedy School co-sponsored the workshop.) If 
anything on this weblog makes you interested in working with CPSR, 
check our list of topics or membership page. 


Development

Elsewhere, perhaps, debate still rages. Do poor people need advanced 
information technology? Can they make proper use of it? Is it 
possible to deploy it in remote areas? 

At the annual meeting we went beyond these questions. Instead, people 
who actually spent time in India, in Malawi, in the Dominican 
Republic, and elsewhere discussed what they learned about the value 
of communications and computers, and how they brought these things to 
local residents in meaningful ways. Throughout all the speakers talks 
ran the critical thread: understand your users and their needs. Work 
with these needs in creative ways. 

Liby Levison, for instance, while stationed in the capital of Malawi, 
experienced frequent telecom failures and pitifully slow connections. 
She learned here an interesting piece of meta-design: that 
underdeveloped areas need entirely different technologies for 
information retrieval. There limitations made it unfeasible to use 
the information retrieval strategy that we use in the developed world 
day after day: enter a search term into a search engine, browse a few 
dozen results, request a home page, follow a link to a resource, etc. 
In rural Malawi, the Internet connection would be down before you 
were half done. 

To respond to the needs of Internet users in these areas, Libby 
developed a deliberately low-tech system with deep ramifications. Her 
TEK (for "time equals knowledge") system works a bit like Web2mail, 
making use of the store-and-forward aspect of email to provide 
robustness in a non-robust environment. A person enters a search term 
and is emailed the Web pages corresponding to the most promising 
search engine results. 

There are more interesting design choices in this system than meet 
the eye. TEK strips out graphics (depending on the user's choice), 
information-poor pages such as portals or home pages that have mostly 
links, duplicate pages, pages in inappropriate languages, and so on. 
It also deals with lost mail through a protocol that acknowledges 
received mail and retransmits lost mail after a timeout. 

Iqbal Quadir, as a financial executive in New York, decided to try to 
provide cell phone access to the poor in his native Bangladesh. To 
find a base for action, he approached the Grameen Bank, which is 
famous for its microcredit for poor entrepreneurs (mostly women). 
Iqbal persuaded the bank, with some difficulty, that a cell phone 
could be just as useful as a cow or a generator in forming the engine 
behind a successful business. Cell coverage is now offered to 30% of 
Bangladesh's territory, reaching 50% of the population. 

Across the subcontinent on the West coast of India, Daryl Martyris of 
World Computer Exchange distributes recycled computers running 
GNU/Linux to schools throughout the state of Goa. Hardware costs (as 
well as software costs, of course) are cut to the minimum by hooking 
minimal clients up to a central service running Linux Terminal Server 
Project (LTSP) software. After-hours use by paying adults is popular. 
Of course, fixing broken systems is a problem, but a small coterie of 
students has been trained to fill WCE's needs. 

Hani Shakeel described a research project in the Dominican Republic, 
which happens to have amazingly advanced communications and computing 
equipment in hundreds of villages around the island, thanks to a 
former president's effort to win popular support. In the village Hani 
chose, these centers are very popular with school-age children, who 
use the visual aspects of Web sites to overcome any limitations they 
suffer in understanding languages. 

Hani designed an asynchronous bulletin board so that people could 
come and go at their convenience. He also integrated text, graphics, 
and voice in such a way that people could use whatever medium was 
most convenient. He even used a text-to-speech synthesizer to allow 
illiterate people to hear text messages. 

As we heard the various needs of people in different areas and stages 
of development, we became increasingly receptive to Judy Brewer, 
director of the W3C's Web Accessibility Initiative, as she talked 
about accessibility. This is not simply a matter of accommodating the 
disabled (although even that could open up the Web to another ten or 
twenty per-cent of the public); measures taken for the disabled 
always have value for other populations too, especially poor people 
who deal with literacy problems, low bandwidth, poor equipment, or 
other limitations. Measures that promote accessibility also promote 
device-independence, a common concern in modern design. 

A framework for understanding the growth of communications 
infrastructure in underdeveloped areas was offered by Annalee C. 
Babb. First one has to provide a physical infrastructure. This allows 
information acquisition and communications such as email. Next one 
needs to provide a financial infrastructure with legal guarantees, 
and then a security level offering privacy, secure transmissions, and 
authentication. Now the people can develop online markets. The fourth 
layer is an administrative that attempts to protect intellectual 
property rights where appropriate "without stifling new intellectual 
property." 

So far, we have familiar aspects on online life. But Annalee went 
further and offered one more levels of access. Operational access 
reflects people who are creative, who can exploit the telecom 
infrastructure to produce something unique to their culture and 
hopefully of value on the world market. This is level where democracy 
and power reside. 

A good note on which to leave the issue of universal access is to ask 
"Who gets to collect and use information?" The ramifications of this 
subtle question were laid out by Calestaous Juma, founder of Kenya's 
African Centre for Technology Studies. He pointed out that Western 
agencies collect an enormous amount of data about Africa that would 
be of value to local people there, such as rainfall patterns. This 
information is stored, however, in Washington. The people most 
affected by the data do not decide what to collect and do not get the 
information in a timely fashion (if at all). In addition to 
eliminating the barriers of cost and technical access, agencies have 
to consult with local users and figure out the best way to collect 
and disseminate information. 

Human rights

The highlight of the day for me was Dr. Patrick Ball's keynote on the 
use of Information and Communications Technologies (ICTS) for human 
rights. It was so eye-opening that I am saving a description of it 
for an upcoming article. The talk was a true revelation for those who 
never previously saw a relationship between free software and human 
rights; it was informative even for those who did. 

Robert Guerra described Privaterra, the relatively new CPSR project 
he started to link computer experts with human rights groups. He 
described it as "bringing the people with the knowledge together with 
the people with the needs." 

Privaterra reflects the key insights of the day: that one cannot help 
people simply by dropping technology in their laps, but should 
evaluate their organizations holistically and design specific 
solutions. Along these lines, Privaterra helps human rights groups 
set up encryption, firewalls, VPNs, and backups. It also brings back 
lessons from developing countries to the developed world. 

Global representation

Doug Schuler is a long-term CPSR member dedicated to representation 
and community-building; he has initiated more such new types of 
representation than most members have even thought of joining. Doug 
has written about community networks and played a key role in the 
Seattle Community Network, coordinated conferences on participatory 
design, and developed working groups at CPSR. Over the past couple 
years he has focused on pulling together discussion, community 
building, and giving a voice to the previously silent through his 
Public Sphere Project. What all these things have in common is people 
participating in decisions about their future. 

But CPSR cannot entirely lose itself in the idealistic construction 
of new public arenas, it also to deal with existing ones. Thus, 
Robert Guerra described how we joined with some 80 other non-
governmental organizations from around the world to present issues of 
public interest to the World Summit on the Information Society, a 
meeting started by the International Telecommunication Union and 
approved by the U.N. 

CPSR itself has gone global over the years. While we always had a few 
members outside the United States, we've just recently had the 
resources and visibility to start some chapters in other countries. 
We heard from a Peruvian member, Katitza Rodriguez, about their 
initiatives in providing wireless Internet access to rural health 
clinics, promoting Internet access to public information, and leading 
the debate on the .pe domain. A Japanese member named Nobuo Sakiyama 
reported on that chapter's intervention into the National ID debate, 
a Carnivore-like device that intercepts email, and a government-
funded, national Internet filtering system with a license that rules 
out reverse engineering or criticism. 

ICANN

Because it controls such a central Internet resource, and because 
this year's Wiener Award went to one of its most prominent critics, 
ICANN deserves its own section. 

ICANN is many things: a trough at which lawyers and consultants line 
up to slurp greedily from public funds, a madhouse where complex 
subdivisions of subdivisions of organizations strive to make their 
voices heard and are indulged or ignored at the Board's whim, and--
not least--a powerful standards-making body whose decisions have a 
long-range policy impact on the use of the Internet. 

CPSR chair Hans Klein, in an afternoon presentation, pointed out that 
ICANN had turned the Law of the Ungovernable Internet into the Myth 
of the Ungovernable Internet. Although he said that the board's 
recent elimination of public representation was a classic case of a 
public body being captured by a private interest, he was cautionary 
but not totally pessimistic on the question of whether ICANN could be 
opened up (or replaced). 

At his evening talk, Wiener Award winner Karl Auerbach, one of the 
few people who has the honor of getting on the ICANN board through 
public election (and even the election is the butt of semantic 
quibbles) talked about the ways ICANN has frittered away legitimacy 
and support, such as by fighting ridiculous battles with national 
governments. He described its sheer incompetence in managing the 
major resource entrusted to it (the Domain Name System) as well as in 
its basic actions as a business entity. 

More fundamentally, Karl described the ambiguous position ICANN 
occupies in between a public and private organization, possessing 
governmental functions but run like a corporation. Although the U.S. 
Department of Commerce could rein it in or dissolve it, they are 
stymied by their confusion over its claim to by a private corporation 
(and the ideology that says governments should not interfere with 
private corporations). He also laid out his suggestion for breaking 
ICANN into four parts along natural fault lines: one part for IP 
address assignment, one for protocol numbers, one for technical 
administration of the Domain Name System, and one for policy issues 
related to the Domain Name System. 

Miscellaneous

On a day like Saturday, everything seemed to fit together. But in 
writing up the day, some fine presentations didn't seem to go in any 
particular category. 

Tu Tran, winner of CPSR's annual student essay contest, delivered a 
quite professional talk about computer forensics, looking at it from 
many points of view. Courts are increasingly allowing searches of 
computers for evidence related both to crimes and to civil suits. 

Not all searches require a warrant: the court may allow a search 
without a warrant if the person did not have a "reasonable 
expectation" that the information would remain hidden. You could lose 
this "reasonable expectation" through something as trivial as sending 
the information to a colleague over email; now another party can 
demand the information. Of course, some critical safeguards remain: 
they have to show probably cause that the information pertains to a 
case and give a precise description of the item to be found. 

And how easily can information be found? Everyday encryption programs 
are good for most purposes, but can be cracked by a determined 
opponent. This includes, obviously, the U.S. government, when a 
journalist in Afghanistan got his hands on a computer and hard disk 
formerly owned by an Al Qaeda member. Thousands of files were 
retrieved, although Ms. Tran did not reveal the contents of those 
files. (Soft porn? Metallica songs?) 

Deleting files, as most administrators know, offers practically no 
protection against retrieval. Zeroing out a disk is little better 
(although it's pretty good when done twice) and even reformatting 
removes just pointers to files rather than the files themselves. 
Tran's recommendation: if you want to prevent data from being 
retrieved, drill a hole in your disk. 

Carlos Osorio presented research questioning the very foundations of 
software licensing. Far from being a form of piracy, the spread of 
unlicensed software in new markets creates a bigger market for 
licensed versions. 

This is not simply a matter of familiar network effects. Native users 
offer the best possible marketing. Why spend hundreds of thousands of 
dollars exporting marketing staff and a canned strategy to a place 
with a different culture, when end-users copying your software can 
talk it up with all the friends and colleagues for you? 

While Carlos suggested several ways proprietary software companies 
can make their licenses more appealing--such as offering good 
customer service or releasing new versions frequently--he ultimately 
recommended the ultimate approach as the most natural approach to 
gaining markets: distributing free and open source software. 

The conference was long but never tedious; tiring but not exhausting. 
Several of us came away with new energy as well as new ideas of where 
to apply it. I felt great pain thinking that many of the areas where 
good work is being done may soon see it all swept away by the storms 
and floods caused by global warming. But as much as we can bring 
people to the Internet and the Internet to the people, we can 
increase discussion of this and other critical issues facing us 
today. 


Andy Oram is an editor at O'Reilly & Associates, specializing in 
books on Linux and programming. Most recently, he edited Peer-to-
Peer: Harnessing the Power of Disruptive Technologies. 


Published on The O'Reilly Network (http://www.oreillynet.com/)
 http://www.oreillynet.com/cs/user/wlg/2118