Opening Ceremony and Session
This year’s opening ceremony and session followed the same format as last year: – ministers from the host country (this year including the Prime Minister) welcomed everyone, reminded us of the importance of the Internet, encouraged us to have free and frank discussions etc. ITU Secretary General Hamadoun Toure, who last year made some rather pointed remarks on ICANN and the future of the Internet, then made a more uncontroversial intervention this year in which he urged a move towards access, use, creation and sharing of information being considered basic rights. In light of the well-known controversy about peer to peer networks I was particularly interested in his mention of ‘sharing’.
After this we had two short keynotes, one from Tim Berners-lee (a busy man today) who launched the World Wide Web Foundation live on stage via a tweet, and one from Jerry Yang, one of the co-founders of Yahoo! who gave us plenty of numbers illustrating the Internet’s growth since Yahoo! began (90,000 new websites per day!).
This was the end of the opening ceremony but we were back in the hall within 15 minutes to hear multiple presentations from various dignitaries from governments, business and civil society, notable for a shared theme of enthusiasm for the IGF and support for freedom of access to information and an open Internet. With the IGF’s mandate up for renewal, the steady stream of endorsements for the Forum, from Viviane Reding at the EU, Rod Beckstrom at ICANN, the US Ambassador to Egypt etc. it’s fair to say everyone here (note that there are some countries, like China, who have previously stated that they do not feel the IGF should continue) wants to the activity to continue. Recommendations will be made to the UN Secretary General, and he will publish his thinking on this next year.
After that it was all about the utter confusion that getting transport anywhere at an IGF involves. This year is exactly the same as last – a total lack of information about hotel shuttle services, website information being completely at odds with the real situation, taxi drivers with no meters who are charging the earth to go five minutes down the road (our hotel is next door to the venue, and it costs 7EURO to go 2 mins in the car. The hotel shuttle can take about 35 mins to do the same journey and there is no guarantee you’ll find it) and, well, general confusion. I did manage to make it to the gala dinner at another hotel but failed to find Sohair and Omnia in the confusion (the dining tables had one candle each, so i could hardly see what I was eating, let alone see my dining companions). Still, the strawberry fruit juices were pretty nice.

