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Explore the current state of the Internet in Kazakhstan and the areas for continued development, examining its infrastructure, resilience, regulatory and policy environment, and emerging trends.
Learn about Internet governance, the multistakeholder approach, and how they are practiced through WSIS and at IGF.
Our strategic partnership with CITEL has helped to close the digital divide through hands-on training programs.
The Internet has been around for 50+ years and has become ingrained in many people’s daily lives. Trust in the Internet is crucial for it to provide opportunities and services, but since its inception ...
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 ...
Ana Carolina Rodrigues Dias Silveira, Ana Paula Camelo, Beatriz Yuriko Schimitt Katano (CEPI FGV Direito SP), Flávio Rech Wagner, Pedro de Perdigão Lana, Raquel Fortes Gatto (Internet Society Brazil ...
We continuously measure and compare the resilience of Internet connectivity in countries using our Pulse Internet Resilience Index and consistently publish articles about resilience on the Pulse blog.
In a small Paraguayan village, women from the Nivaclé Indigenous people are using the Internet to sell carob flour directly to consumers in the capital city of Asunción, bringing larger profits for ...
Technical measures to screen the content of messages in end-to-end encrypted (E2EE) systems introduce systemic risk for both service providers and users. They frustrate law-abiding users’ intent to ...
This is the final version of this background paper, published on 11 October 2024, along with the ITU World Telecommunication Standardization Assembly 2024 Issues Matrix. This background paper on the ...
Editor’s note: This page was originally published on 10 October 2024. It was updated with the final version of the Outcomes Matrix on 18 November 2024. ITU WTSA-24 Outcomes Matrix summarizes the ...
In a critically important decision today, the United States Supreme Court reaffirmed the strong conclusion that website operators have a constitutional right to moderate content posted on their sites.
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