World Economic Forum Launches Future of the Internet Initiative

  • world economic forumNew multi-year initiative aims to strengthen trust and expand cooperation on internet-related challenges and opportunities
  • Dialogue will complement formal institutions and existing initiatives by Forum communities
  • Initiative to focus initially on five broad areas that are crucial to the future of the internet and the digital economy
  • For more information about the Annual Meeting 2015:http://wef.ch/davos15

Davos, Switzerland, 24 January 2015 – The World Economic Forum today launches a multi-year Future of the Internet Initiative in an effort to help strengthen trust and expand concrete cooperation on internet-related challenges and opportunities. The informal process of strategic dialogue and cooperation will seek to complement formal institutions and existing initiatives. It will do so by leveraging the Forum’s unique inter-ministerial and cross-industry communities, as well as its interdisciplinary intellectual networks and capacity to catalyse multistakeholder partnerships.

The purpose of the initiative is to help develop the internet as a core engine of human progress and safeguard its globally integrated, highly distributed and multistakeholder nature. It comes at a time when policy-makers – who are struggling to keep pace with many related policy and governance questions – and governments seek to address legitimate policy concerns related to the increasingly diverse array of services and other activities available on the web.

The initiative will initially focus on the following five broad areas, potentially exploring such questions as:

  • Policy and societal challenges: How can international cooperation help ensure the essential globally interoperable nature of the internet at the same time that governments seek to address legitimate social, security and other concerns in line with national preferences and decision-making processes?
  • Privacy: How can the promise of big data for many aspects of social and economic progress be realized while ensuring fundamental standards of personal privacy?
  • Cybercrime: How can international cooperation among companies and law enforcement and national security authorities be improved in ways that strengthen the security of and public confidence in the internet?
  • Access for all: With over half the global population not yet online, how can public-private efforts to expand internet access and content be accelerated in developing countries and marginalized communities?
  • Impact on business models: How is the internet and digital technology likely to transform business models and alter the industrial landscape in the years to come? What new business, social and other policy challenges are these changes likely to create?

“The internet is a shared, global resource that for over 25 years has served as a key tool for social, political and economic development. It is vital that we safeguard this shared global resource by finding ways of debating and together addressing the challenges it faces,” said Klaus Schwab, Founder and Executive Chairman, World Economic Forum.

“Striking the right balance on all these issues will require mutual understanding and trust among interested parties and stakeholders. We hope to help achieve this through additional direct dialogue, supported wherever possible by careful analysis, and invite our partners, members and constituents to engage actively in this process,” said Richard Samans, Managing Director and Member of the Managing Board, World Economic Forum.

The future of the internet is one of 10 global challenges identified by the World Economic Forum for which accelerated progress is widely perceived to be contingent on new or expanded public-private cooperation.

The Co-Chairs of the Annual Meeting 2015 are: Hari S. Bhartia, Co-Chairman and Founder, Jubilant Bhartia Group, India; Winnie Byanyima, Executive Director, Oxfam International, United Kingdom; Katherine Garrett-Cox, Chief Executive Officer and Chief Investment Officer, Alliance Trust, United Kingdom; Young Global Leader Alumnus; Jim Yong Kim, President, The World Bank, Washington DC; Eric Schmidt, Executive Chairman, Google, USA; and Roberto Egydio Setubal, Chief Executive Officer and Vice-Chairman of the Board of Directors, Itaú Unibanco, Brazil.

 

 


The World Economic Forum is an international institution committed to improving the state of the world through public-private cooperation in the spirit of global citizenship. It engages with business, political, academic and other leaders of society to shape global, regional and industry agendas.

Incorporated as a not-for-profit foundation in 1971 and headquartered in Geneva, Switzerland, the Forum is independent, impartial and not tied to any interests. It cooperates closely with all leading international organizations (www.weforum.org).