What Governments Can Learn from Canada when Regulating Online Harms
Canada’s Online Harms Act should be an example of how to protect the fundamentals of the Internet while improving online safety.
Latest Posts
OFCOM DNSSEC Deployment Study Report Provides Great Tutorial, Statistics, More
Ofcom, the UK's communications regulator, on October 4, 2011, published the results of a survey of DNSSEC deployment within the United Kingdom. Ofcom specifically asked InterConnect Communications, the authors ...
Slides: How IPv6 Will Impact SIP and Telecommunications
How will IPv6 impact telecom? And in particular the open standard of the SIP protocol? Will telecommunications "just work" with IPv6? Or will it break? I recently attended the 7th ...
Slides: How IPv6 Will Impact SIP and Telecommunications
How will IPv6 impact telecom? And in particular the open standard of the SIP protocol? Will telecommunications "just work" with IPv6? Or will it break? I recently attended the 7th ...
Welcome to the Preview Release of the DO Hub!
Welcome to the "preview release" of the DO Hub web site! While our full launch of the site isn't until December, we wanted to get a preview of the project ...
Richard Jimmerson Presenting At Australian IPv6 Summit 2011
Today in Melbourne, Australia, the director of our program, Richard Jimmerson, is speaking at the Australian IPv6 Summit 2011 on the topic of "How We Get There From Here: ISOC ...
Access to Internet – A fundamental human right
I have had a chance to attend a workshop on Access and Diversity of Broadband Internet Access Center for Science, Development and Media studies on the first day of IGF ...
Blocking Internet content: harmful or efficient?
Many governments in the world are imposing DNS blocking/filtering measures as solutions to fight illegal online content. Either we talk about child pornography, copyright infringement, drugs or online gambling, governments ...