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Signatures 3097 total

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  1. 1
    Name: Yrjö Länsipuro on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  2. 2
    Name: Daniel Gustafsson on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: All questions about Internet is a sake of the people of the world, not an elite!
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  3. 3
    Name: Joseph Nkangi on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: We need true transperancy to the dot and freedom for all, whether in private sector or governments.
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  4. 4
    Name: Mauro D. Ríos on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  5. 5
    Name: Anonymous on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  6. 6
    Name: Harry Janssen on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I support this petition.
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  7. 7
    Name: Louis J. Gleason on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  8. 8
    Name: Anonymous on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  9. 9
    Name: Khaled KOUBAA on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I support an open and inclusive process
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  10. 10
    Name: Christoph Graf on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: Keep the Internet open, transparent, and inclusive!
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  11. 11
    Name: Vaughn Martinian on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: Positive.
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  12. 12
    Name: Dr. Albin Wallace on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  13. 13
    Name: John S. Whitford on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  14. 14
    Name: Rahman Khan John on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  15. 15
    Name: Maria Laura Ferreyra on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  16. 16
    Name: Adeep Taneja on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  17. 17
    Name: Arturo L. Servin on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: IGF has been open, not close it now. It must remain open. IGF is not perfect now, do not make it worst by closing it to governments only. UN needs input from all the community.
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  18. 18
    Name: Ivan Moura Campos on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: Internet governance involves all segments of society, and any approach that is not inclusive of the private sector and civil society, along with governments, is flawed at birth.
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  19. 19
    Name: Suhas J Manangi on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: We ask the Secretary-General of the United Nations to set up a working group on Internet governance, in an open and inclusive process that ensures a mechanism for the full and active participation of governments, the private sector and civil society from both developing and developed countries, involving relevant intergovernmental and international organizations and forums, to investigate and make proposals for action…
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  20. 20
    Name: Harm Jan Van Burg on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I fully support this petition. Being a long time civil servand and active in the standardsetting community both governmental and private sector, I cannot think at any other way than public and private sector together. The UN is not only from governments but also from the peoples of this world.
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  21. 21
    Name: Jan Flodin on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  22. 22
    Name: Jeremy Hunsinger, Ph.D. on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  23. 23
    Name: Jeremy Hunsinger, Ph.D. on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  24. 24
    Name: Mauro Nuñez on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  25. 25
    Name: Carlo Cosmatos on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  26. 26
    Name: Brett Willcocks on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I think that only having governments involved will not allow for a full and correct understanding of what is needed.
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  27. 27
    Name: Connie J Kendig on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  28. 28
    Name: Neena Sachdev on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: The internet must be maintained as a openly governed and an open channel for all participants, governments, private sector and civil society. We CANNOT be UN member nor a set of United Nations without such an open forum.
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  29. 29
    Name: Ivar A. M. Hartmann on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  30. 30
    Name: Anonymous on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  31. 31
    Name: Filiz Yilmaz on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  32. 32
    Name: Geoff Cox on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I would wish the group to be more inclusive.
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  33. 33
    Name: Johan Elkink on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  34. 34
    Name: Noah Sematimba on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I firmly believe in the principles of an open an fully inclusive internet governance process that has civil society, business, and governments working alongside each other and with none taking a dominant role at the expense of the others. This will go a long way in ensuring an open and free internet.
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  35. 35
    Name: Kurt Erik Lindqvist on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  36. 36
    Name: Rabih Itani on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  37. 37
    Name: Thibault on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  38. 38
    Name: Danny Aerts on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: CEO .SE
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  39. 39
    Name: Maria Alejandrina Sande Maite on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  40. 40
    Name: Neil M. Howard on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  41. 41
    Name: Anonymous on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  42. 42
    Name: Alejandro Pisanty on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: The CSTD or its group for the IGF may argue that they intend to continue to make the IGF open to all stakeholders' participation. THAT IS NOT ENOUGH. All decisions related to Internet governance need be made in a multistakeholder environment. Therefore the CSTD has to either not form this group, and use its participation in the IGF Multistakeholder Advisory Group to promote its view of improvements there, or to form this group with an equally open participation of all stakeholders. We believe that this second alternative is undesirable because it will create one more organizational layer and one more unneeded step in the process. The risk that the CSTD is incurring is that the other stakeholders will not participate fully and make the CSTD-reformed IGF irrelevant by routing around it as damage.
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  43. 43
    Name: Wout De Natris on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: The IGF is an asset to the world and should continue for at least 5 more years.
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  44. 44
    Name: Jyrki Soini on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  45. 45
    Name: Oyebisi Babatunde Oluseyi on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  46. 46
    Name: Per Darnell on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  47. 47
    Name: Nurani Nimpuno on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  48. 48
    Name: Anonymous on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments:
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  49. 49
    Name: Alessandro Vesely on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: Democracy is quite an important issue in most aspects of Internet Governance. Since there is no universally agreed method to determine any government's compliance on Democracy requirements, openness is a must.
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  50. 50
    Name: Ngoni Murimba on Dec 10, 2010
    Comments: I'm asking the Secretary-General of the United Nations to set up a working group on Internet governance, in an open and inclusive process that ensures a mechanism for the full and active participation of governments, the private sector and civil society from both developing and developed countries
    Flag

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