Hi all, Today, 4 March, ARTICLE 19 and Coding Rights are launching ‘Net of Rights’, a short film which explores the link between internet protocols and human rights online. The film will screen at 6pm at the Internet Freedom Festival. Please find the film Net of Rights here: https://hrpc.io/wp-content/uploads/videos/netofrights.io.mp4 and the teaser here: https://hrpc.io/wp-content/uploads/videos/netofrights.io_teaser.mp4 If the teaser doesn't show in your browser, you can also use this link: https://vimeo.com/157722482 Here is the press release (also below): http://is.gd/kqYjc3 and please get involved in the work at hrpc at: https://www.irtf.org/mailman/listinfo/hrpc It is too-often assumed that there is no link between protocols (the standards which underpin the way the internet functions) and human rights, but this is simply not the case, as the film argues. The Internet aspires to be the global ‘network of networks’, providing connectivity for all users, at all times, for any content. Connectivity increases the capacity for individuals to exercise their rights, meaning that the architectural design of the internet is, necessarily, intertwined with the human rights framework. Promoting open, secure and reliable connectivity is essential for the rights to privacy, expression and assembly. But how are these concepts addressed at the protocol level? Without proper definition, the human rights-enabling characteristics of the internet are at risk. The role of human rights in Internet policy is slowly becoming part of the general discourse. Former United Nations (UN) Special Rapporteur on the promotion and protection of the right to freedom of opinion and expression, Frank La Rue, explicitly spoke of the replationship, leading to the approval of the landmark resolution "on the promotion, protection and enjoyment of human rights on the Internet" at the UN Human Rights Council, and the resolution "The right to privacy in the digital age" at the UN General Assembly. Mapping the relationship between human rights and internet protocols and architectures is a new research challenge, which requires the development of a consistent methodology, bringing human rights experts together with the community of researchers and developers of Internet standards and technologies. The Human Rights Protocol Research Group is a group chartered to research how standards and protocols (the rules by which the internet functions) can enable, strengthen, or threaten human rights. The rights-enabling characteristics of the Internet will be increasingly endangered if they are not properly defined, described and protected as such. And, indeed, the other way around: by not protecting these characteristics, we risk loss of functionality and connectivity in the architecture of the internet itself. To protect human rights online, it will be necessary to explore and map the link between rights and protocol, ensuring the survival of a decentralized and collaborative internet, in which freedom of expression through unimpeded connectivity remains a central principle, and a guiding force. Conceived in partnership between ARTICLE 19 and Coding Rights, this film aims to highlight the importance of addressing this issue within the technical community and human rights advocates, but also to feed into the work of the Human Rights Protocol Considerations research group (HRPC) in the Internet Research Task Force (IRTF). This group is currently mapping the relation between human rights and Internet protocols, in order to strengthen the Internet as a human rights enabling environment, in which freedom of expression through unimpeded connectivity remains a central principle and guiding force. All the best, Niels -- Niels ten Oever Head of Digital Article 19 www.article19.org PGP fingerprint 8D9F C567 BEE4 A431 56C4 678B 08B5 A0F2 636D 68E9