国产视频

In Short

It’s Not Too Late to Save the Internet

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This article in , a collaboration among , , and .

An internet blackout in Belarus last week was the latest reminder of why an open internet is essential to human rights in the 21st century. The Belarusian government began early on Sunday, Aug. 9, shortly before voting started in a presidential election that opposition candidates and activists believe was rigged in favor of longtime strongman Alexander Lukashenko. By the end of the day, when protesters flooded into the street, the internet blackout had grown more , of the bloody crackdown that ensued. According to the independent monitoring group , service only resumed on the morning of Aug. 12. By that point, more than 6,000 people had been arrested and many opposition leaders , including the main opposition candidate, Svetlana Tikhanovskaya. During the blackout, one of the few lifelines between protesters and the outside world was an , operating out of Poland through the messaging app .

What happened in Belarus is a reminder of why a free and open global internet is vital for democracy. Perhaps most famously, the Chinese Communist Party has fenced off China鈥檚 internet from the rest of the world. The Chinese people are surveilled, censored, and manipulated with propaganda and disinformation through apps, networks, and networking equipment controlled by Chinese companies that are held liable for everything their users say and do. China鈥檚 鈥攚hich states that all governments have a sovereign right to control what technologies and networks their citizens can use and how they can use them鈥攁ppeals to many world leaders who fear strong political opposition. Internet sovereignty is embraced not only by the likes of Russia鈥檚 Vladimir Putin but also by democratically elected populist leaders seeking to shore up their power. For example, India鈥檚 Narendra Modi recently moved to block Chinese apps including WeChat and TikTok, citing national security concerns, with the of denying activists channels for dissent.

The Trump administration is pursuing its own version of internet sovereignty. Trump recently on Chinese-owned apps like TikTok and WeChat, and the State Department announced the expansion of its 鈥渃lean鈥 , which seeks to purge Chinese companies and technologies from U.S. networks. There are indeed about networking technology sold by the Chinese company Huawei. It is certainly true that, as Chinese-owned apps, TikTok and WeChat are demands by their home government, extending Chinese government controls . But eliminating Chinese tech from U.S. networks and platforms only protects people from Chinese government surveillance conducted directly via Chinese companies. It to protect users from hackers and spies鈥斺攚ho take advantage of companies鈥 security vulnerabilities and lax privacy standards.

If Trump obtains a second term, his policies will empower and legitimize efforts by governments around the world to in service of their own geopolitical and domestic objectives. Asserting internet sovereignty already helps incumbent leaders and their political parties tip the scales to manipulate elections and manufacture their own legitimacy, particularly in countries with weak or deteriorating rule of law鈥攚hich is now on a , including in the U.S. If the Trump administration helps to normalize the banning and blocking of entire apps and platforms, strongmen will be in an even stronger position.

Cross-border trust between and among governments, companies, and individuals has hit an all-time low, even with democratic allies and longtime trading partners. In July, the European Court of Justice agreement, a legal mechanism that enables U.S. companies to transfer data between the EU and the U.S. (For example, when somebody in Europe uses or to store and share documents, that data may be stored or pass through U.S.-based computer servers.) The court determined that Europeans鈥 rights are insufficiently protected under U.S. jurisdiction. It pointed to the failure of U.S. law to offer adequate privacy protections, surveillance programs that grant overly broad access to personal data by U.S. government agencies, and the absence of a right of private action by EU citizens in U.S. courts. This is the second time that a U.S.-EU data transfer agreement has been struck down in court. The implications are clear: If the next Congress fails to pass a strong federal privacy law and enact significant surveillance reforms, the EU will erect even stronger digital boundaries, further fragmenting the internet.

If the American people deny Trump a second term, the Biden-Harris administration will need to reboot America鈥檚 internet policy and recommit to a vision of an open internet through which data and information can flow freely. Congress must take decisive steps to protect internet users from abuse of government surveillance powers. It must curb invasive and opaque commercial data tracking that not only enables platforms and advertisers to manipulate users鈥 behavior, but also serves up a treasure trove of behavioral data that is 鈥攂y anyone, including directly and indirectly by a range of intelligence agencies. Legislative action to protect the rights of people who use U.S. companies鈥 networks and platforms will make it easier for governments and companies to work together toward further transparency and accountability standards.

Transparency standards for government access to data are the next essential step. If the U.S. and EU take the lead, other nations that seek to benefit from being part of an open and interconnected internet are likely to follow. In the wake of the revelations by former National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden in 2013, many U.S. companies sought to repair the loss of trust with their global customers about the extent of U.S. surveillance access to their data. A growing number of companies have begun to publish 鈥,鈥 containing information about the volume and nature of government requests for user data that they receive and comply with. Some European telecommunications companies (such as and ) and even some East Asian companies (like and the ) have since followed suit. As the implications of TikTok鈥檚 Chinese origins came under increasing scrutiny in Washington, the company responded by producing a . Zoom, which is U.S.-owned but has substantial operations in China, has also promised to address consumer and regulatory concerns. Right now, however, transparency reports are voluntary, vary widely in quality and scope, and are not independently audited or verified. Lawmakers could change that.

If Trump obtains a second term, his policies will empower and legitimize efforts by governments around the world to fence off different parts of the internet in service of their own geopolitical and domestic objectives

Governments seeking to improve mutual cross-border trust could make transparency reporting mandatory for companies over a certain size, or otherwise confer an official certification to companies whose transparency reports meet certain standards and have been audited. More importantly, governments themselves need to be more transparent and accountable about their surveillance activities through commercial digital services. A found that while some countries have made steps toward greater transparency and accountability in surveillance practices, the effectiveness of oversight mechanisms was mixed, and citizens鈥 access to legal remedy in cases of abuse was generally not straightforward. The U.S. Office of the Director of National Intelligence does issue an with data on the use of national surveillance authorities. is evidence that the FBI recently failed to comply with warrant requirements. It is not currently possible, however, for European users of U.S. digital services to obtain redress for such abuses of surveillance power. and norms between countries with strong rule of law and human rights protections is essential to building confidence in the viability鈥攁nd desirability鈥攐f an open internet through which data and information can flow freely across borders.

The U.S. must work with allies to ensure that the design, operation, and governance of digital platforms, services, and devices is . Back in 2011, more than a year after then鈥揝ecretary of State Hillary Clinton , the U.S. and the Netherlands launched the , 鈥渁 group of governments who have committed to work together to support Internet freedom and protect fundamental human rights鈥攆ree expression, association, assembly, and privacy online鈥攚orldwide.鈥 Membership in this coalition, which has received little media attention since its founding, has since grown from 15 to 32 members. The coalition is led mainly by foreign ministries that negotiate statements and diplomatic communiqu茅s at the United Nations and other multilateral policy bodies, but it has had little effect on member countries鈥 national legislation, or on the actions of members鈥 domestic surveillance agencies. There is presently no mechanism for member states to hold one another accountable for their human rights commitments. At the very least, member states should submit action plans for how they will uphold their commitments to protect human rights online. A key metric should be an assessment of the extent to which national laws affecting the internet are consistent with international human rights standards, with a report on progress made toward reforming laws that are not, accompanied by independent civil society responses. Countries that show no progress or obvious bad faith should be put on notice and, ultimately, expelled if necessary.

Across Europe, there is around requiring companies to conduct formal to identify how their business operations affect human rights, and to demonstrate to shareholders and consumers what they are doing to mitigate harm. A new U.S. administration should work with Congress to pass similar laws, thereby empowering consumers and shareholders to hold companies accountable for whether companies that offer digital services to millions of Americans are even paying attention to and product design affect users鈥 rights. In both Europe and the U.S., such due diligence laws must include digital rights such as freedom of expression and privacy.

国产视频 vision of internet sovereignty is an attempt to beat China at its own game of great power competition among digital spheres of influence. But Trumpian internet sovereignty offers nothing to the people of other nations beyond an invitation to choose sides in the competition between great powers. A Biden administration will need to address real challenges posed by China while also restoring global faith in an open, interoperable internet upon which open societies and open markets depend. This agenda for privacy and security, transparency, and accountability will require extraordinary leadership and political will to implement. The future of democracy around the world likely depends on it.

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It’s Not Too Late to Save the Internet