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Board of Trustees

2003 Board Election

Candidates

Candidate Profile: Jean-Claude Guédon

jean.claude.guedon@umontreal.ca

Please find enclosed my request to be placed on the list of candidates for
the Chapter membership election leading to a seat on the Board of Trustees of
ISOC.

I can confidently state that I can spend a sufficient amount of time to respond to the demands of this position.

Position statement:

I have been working for ISOC in a number of ways for the last eight years, most rominently as a steady member of the Program committees from the year 1996 until 2000 and again in 2002. I have co-chaired this committee on three
occasions, in 1996, 1998 and 2000. This role has allowed me to gain a good knowledge of the issues to which ISOC members react most.

In these years, I have also come to realize that ISOC has suffered from a kind
of identity problem: between IETF, IAB and ICANN , among other organizations,
ISOC has not been able to define a clear range of issues and position statements that would have greatly helped in the development of a coherent strategy to develop members and chapters. Had these issues and values been clearly identified and broacast, it is my belief that it would have greatly helped develop world-wide communities united by a clear set of goals and values relating to the Internet. It is not enough to say that te Internet is revolutionary; it is also necessary to put content behind such a claim. In effect, these claims have remained largely empty of meaning and have moved dangerously close to slogans.

I believe I can help ISOC to focus on a clear range of issues that would help
a healthy development of the Internet in the world, for example :

  1. Problems of access and digital divide;
  2. Problems of cultural diversity and the technical issues that relate to
    this matter (think of the domain names in linguistic areas where ascii is
    patently insufficient - an issue that ICANN appears close to solving.
  3. Problems of peer-to-peer versus client-server approaches.
  4. Local laws and internet uses.
  5. Internet and world development.
  6. Internet and the preservation of peace - war will not always prevail, incidentally.
  7. Identity and confidentiality: issues of cryptography.

I could go on listing such issues for several pages, but the present list gives a flavor of what I am concerned about. All this could be summarized in
two basic statements:

  1. The Internet society must sharpen its vision of itself, its functions, its
    strategic and core roles, while reinforcing its financial base (and without becoming a prisonner of these concerns either);
  2. The internet is affecting many dimensions of life in society in a wide variety of contexts and this must become an importat basis for the definition of ISOC activities.

I hope all citizens of any country, women as well as men, will recognize the importance of these issues wherever they may live.

Thank you

Jean-Claude Guédon
Professeur
Littérature comparée, Université de Montréal
Tél. : 1-514-343-6208
Fax : 1-514-343-2211