Our visby agenda An alternative attempt to create a European IT policy agenda

Our Visby Agenda

This, is Our Visby Agenda

Ladies and gentlemen. It is conference time, therefore we are proud to publish what we call "The Visby Conference Edition".

OVA

Download it (doc, pdf, prezi-presentation), read it, spread it, blog it. And if you're a policy maker: implement it!

Thank you everybody for helping out in the process.

Previous document updates below:

Weekly update - 2009-11-02

We're not done yet, but it's slowly getting there. There are spelling errors, broken sentences, counterintuitive arguments. But it is our working document as of 2009-11-02, the raw edition.

  • Download the agenda draft (pdf), (doc).
  • Leave a comment at the bottom of this page
  • or mail your comments to stefan@visbyagenda.se
  • or blog about it yourself and ping back to this page.

Weekly update - 2009-10-26

A minor update, but a bit more complete. There are spelling errors, broken sentences, counterintuitive arguments. But it is our working document as of 2009-10-26, the raw edition.

  • Download the agenda draft (pdf), (doc).
  • Annotate your comments here,
  • or leave a comment at the bottom of this page
  • or mail your comments to stefan@visbyagenda.se
  • or blog about it yourself and ping back to this page.

Weekly update - 2009-10-19

We'll call it a good starting point. No more than that. There are spelling errors, broken sentences, counterintuitive arguments. But it is our working document as of 2009-10-19, the raw edition.

  • Download the agenda draft (pdf), (doc).
  • Annotate your comments here,
  • or leave a comment at the bottom of this page
  • or mail your comments to stefan@visbyagenda.se
  • or blog about it yourself and ping back to this page.
Comments (1) Trackbacks (0)
  1. The most important topic to me is clarifying if new internet laws comply with the constitutions of our different countries. A constitution is the foundation of a democratic country. They are supposed to protect us from the whims of elected governments who have a hidden agenda. For example the German nazi party before WWII.

    I believe that EU’s web traffic collection directives are against the Swedish Constitution, as it prevents (or is supposed to prevent) the Swedish state from creating a registry of people based on their political opinions. Current business intelligence technology facilitates a political opinion registry quite easily with the help of web traffic data.

    Others may not agree with me but I would like this issue looked at with some serious consideration.

    Thank you


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