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On , Internet Society President and CEO Sally Wentworth delivered the following remarks to the ICTs Ministers Consultative Meeting on AFRINIC convened by the African Telecommunications Union. The ...
Earlier this year, the UK government ordered Apple to provide access to encrypted data in the company's cloud storage service ...
In February of this year, the Internet Society hosted an Encryption Advocacy Workshop in Brussels for European civil society ...
When you use the Internet, there are endless possibilities at your fingertips. Everyone deserves the opportunity to be an Internet user.
Endorse the Internet Society’s submission to the WSIS+20 Elements Paper, which reflects the diverse voices, experiences, and perspectives of our community worldwide.
Peering is a fundamental part of how the Internet works. It allows networks to exchange traffic directly, reducing reliance on intermediaries. This improves performance, lowers costs, and increases ...
Banning TikTok would be a dangerous decision putting the security of millions and the open, global Internet at risk.
Explore Internet governance, the Internet Society's work in the United Nations, and the importance of multistakeholderism in this Q&A.
We are committed to helping Indigenous communities around the world bridge the digital divide and connect to the Internet.
While many of us take watching the Olympics for granted, the digital divide excludes many people around the world due to lack of connectivity.
Technical measures to screen messages in end-to-end encrypted systems introduce systemic risk for both service providers and users.
This paper outlines the objectives and key issues to be addressed at the World Telecommunication Standardization Assembly (WTSA) 2024.
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