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Internet Society and IETF. Dawit Bekele, Manager African Regional Bureau Internet Society (ISOC) For AfTLD 2 nd ccTLD African event April 2008. What is ISOC?. Mission "To assure the open development, evolution and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people throughout the world.”
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Internet Society and IETF Dawit Bekele, Manager African Regional Bureau Internet Society (ISOC) For AfTLD 2nd ccTLD African event April 2008
What is ISOC? • Mission • "To assure the open development, evolution and use of the Internet for the benefit of all people throughout the world.” • Not-for-profit charitable organization • Global, but with a local perspective • 84+ ISOC Chapters worldwide • 26,000+ Individual members, 150 Organisational members
ISOC Chapters • Mostly volunteer entities supporting ISOC’s Mission & Principles • Vital to ISOC’s “global” reach • Important component of ISOC’s Strategic Operating Plan • Serve interests of local community • Organise activities/events/education locally • Provide services in local language • Amplify ISOC efforts locally/regionally • Provide local perspective back to ISOC
What Makes the Internet Society Unique? • Sole focus is the Internet • Education, Standards, Policy • Organisational home of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) • Enable capacity and technical community building throughout the world • Key player in Internet policy • Particularly in the Internet Governance Forum
What does ISOC do? Promoting governmental policies that support Internet growth Enabling technical capacity building and community development throughout the world Organisational home of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF)
ISOC’s Initiatives • Enabling access • Policy, regulation and access • Develop access priorities • Provide pertinent information on access issues • Encourage adoption of Internet friendly public policies • Promote ISOC values to policy makers (IGF Ambassadors) • Technical capacity building • Train 850 network operators within a year • Identify new needs for technical education • Conduct and improve ISOC Fellowship to IETF • Underserved communities • Disabilities access • Remote areas • Multilingualism
ISOC’s Initiatives … • Internetworks Initiative • Common and Open Internet Program • Identify limiters to the common and open Internet • Protect the end-to-end nature of the Internet • Global addressing program • Issues in deploying IPv6 • Support development and deployment of key technologies for ensuring a stable and securing Internet
ISOC’s Initiatives … • Trust and Identity • Baseline studies • Leveraging stakeholder relationships • Tools, case studies and test implementations
Activities in Africa • Support for • AfNOG workshops • ccTLD workskhops • Advanced workshops under planning • AfriNIC • AfNOG track E0 Localisation pilot • ISOC Fellowship to IETF • Project funding • Regional Policy meetings • Bridge between policy and technology • IGF related meetings (Abuja, Kigali) • Policy INET
Education Publications & Resources • IETF Journal • A review of what's happening in the world of Internet standards with a focus on the activities of IETF Working Groups • Highlights hot issues being discussed in IETF meetings and IETF mailing lists • Published 3 times per year • http://www.isoc.org/ietfjournal • Workshop Resource Centre • On-line repository of presentations and materials from Internet conferences worldwide • Managed by NSRC • http://ws.edu.isoc.org
A Few of the People We Reach… ISOC Fellows at IETF 67 (L to R): Azael Fernandez Alcantara (Mexico), Alfred Prasad (Fiji), and Laupue Raymond Hughes (Samoa) Students and instructors, ccTLD Workshop in Guyana, Feb. 2007 ccTLD Workshop in Nairobi, Kenya, Sept. 2005 Pre-SANOG Workshop Participants, Bhutan Jan. 2005
ISOC and the IETF ISOC is the organizational home of the (Internet Engineering Task Force) IETF About the Internet Society 20 February 2008 14
IETF Mission - RFC 3935 The mission of the IETF is to produce high quality, relevant technical and engineering documents that influence the way people design, use, and manage the Internet in such a way as to make the Internet work better. These documents include protocol standards, best current practices, and informational documents of various kinds.
The IETF - http://www.ietf.org Internet Engineering Task Force Formed 1986 – 22nd anniversary Jan. 2008 Produces Internet Standards Standards process open to all “Rough consensus and running code” No voting since no members Multiple interoperable implementations Internet Standard => wide use Standards Documents open and free of charge Protocols become standards when widely used, not because of government recognition There are others internet standardisation bodies: ITU, W3C, etc, that have different roles and processes
Scope“Above the wire, below the application” Content and applications standards (HTML, XML, Java) – Promotes creativity and innovation in applications such as World Wide Web, ebanking, wiki, Skype, and much more Internet protocols and standardseg. TCP, IP, Routing, SIP, Mobile IP, Streaming Video & Audio, IP Sec, ppp, FTP, ssh and more… Telecommunications infrastructure– Physical network made up of underwater cables, telephone lines, fiber optics, satellites, microwaves, wi-fi, and so on facilitates the physical transfer of electronic data.
Core Principles of the IETF Participation Technical competence Individual and not company Volunteer Core Open: Anyone can register to a working group and be part of the process All decisions are made on line Face to face meetings three times a year, but not compulsory for participation
IETF Areashttp://tools.ietf.org/area/ Applications General Internet Operations and Management Real-Time Applications and Infrastructure Routing Security Transport
Other Resources • www.isoc.org • www.ietf.org • http://www.rfc-editor.org • http://ietfjournal.isoc.org • http://ws.edu.isoc.org/ • http://www.iana.org
Questions? http://isoc.org/useful/url/ bekele@isoc.org 23