Constance Bommelaer Senior Director, Global Policy Partnerships

Constance Bommelaer

Senior Director, Global Policy Partnerships

Constance joined the Internet Society in 2006. She is currently Senior Director of Global Policy Partnerships and helps developing partnerships with international organizations as well as strategic positions on key Internet issues. In this role, she founded and now coordinates the Internet Technical Advisory Committee (ITAC) to the OECD. She also leads ISOC’s engagement with UNESCO, WIPO, the G8, the G20 and the IGF. In 2010 and 2011 she was responsible for the strategic development of the Internet Society’s Next Generation Leaders program, a youth program designed to help prepare young professionals from around the world to become the next generation of Internet technology, policy, and business leaders.
She was previously a Policy Officer with the French Prime Minister’s Office (Direction du development des medias; 2003-2006), covering Internet governance matters, regulatory affairs and information society issues. Constance participated in the World Summit on Information Society (WSIS), contributed to building legal and technical cooperation activities between France and African countries (e.g. Signal Spam project) and acted as a liaison with the European Commission on French e-content related projects.
Since 2003, Constance also serves as a Naval Ensign in the reserve of the French Navy.
She has studied law and political sciences and speaks fluent English.
Constance is based in Geneva, Switzerland
 

From: Constance Bommelaer <bo*******@**oc.org>
Date: December 20, 2013 12:27:32 PM EST
Subject: [Internet Policy] 1net Steering Committee & Brazil Committees – Call for expressions of interest – Internet technical community

 

Dear all,
 
The Internet Society (ISOC) is coordinating the process leading to appointments to represent the Internet technical community in two of the “Brazil Planning Committees” and in the “1net Steering Committee”
 
The “Brazil Planning Committees” will contribute to the preparation of a “Global Multistakeholder Meeting on the Future of Internet Governance” that will be held on 23 and 24 April 2014, in Sao Paolo, Brazil.
 
The two major tasks of “1net Steering Committee” will be (1) to liaise with stakeholder communities and encourage participation and submission of productive ideas with respect to Internet governance issues; and (2) to steer, manage, and otherwise lead the activities of the 1net platform towards a productive understanding and possibly consensus with respect to these issues.
 
Individuals interested in being suggested by the NomCom set up for this purpose are invited to read more about the process and the timeline here: http://www.internetsociety.org/sites/default/files/Call1netBR-ForPublication.pdf 
 
The deadline for submitting expressions of interest is 10 January 2014.
 
Any questions or requests for additional information can be sent to: in**************@***il.com.
 
Useful links:
 
 
Thank you and best regards,
Constance Bommelaer
Senior Director, Global Policy Partnerships
The Internet Society

Leading Internet Engineers Agree to Upgrade Standards to Improve Internet Privacy and Security

IETF Chair Blog
http://www.ietf.org/blog/2013/11/strengthening-the-internet/
IETF Technical Plenary Video archive
http://www.ietf.org/live/
IETF Technical Plenary Consensus report
http://www.ietf.org/mail-archive/web/ietf/current/msg83857.html

LEADING INTERNET ENGINEERS AGREE TO UPGRADE STANDARDS TO IMPROVE INTERNET PRIVACY AND SECURITY

IETF reaches broad consensus to improve the security of Internet protocols to respond to pervasive surveillance

VANCOUVER, British Columbia–(BUSINESS WIRE)– Internet security has been a focus this week for the more than 1100 engineers and technologists from around the world gathered at the 88th meeting of the Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF). As the Internet’s premier standards organization responsible for developing the foundation of services and technologies used billions of times every day, IETF participants are rethinking approaches to security across a wide range of technical areas.
“Ensuring the global Internet is a trusted platform for billions of users is a core and ongoing concern for the IETF community. Discussions over the past few months, including many in the more than 100 working group sessions this week, are carefully and systematically reviewing Internet security and exploring ways to improve privacy and other aspects of security for different applications,” said Jari Arkko, Chair of the IETF. “Internet security has many facets, and the IETF is focused on ensuring that the technical Internet protocols that it develops provide a strong foundation for privacy and security.”
“The Internet has been turned into a giant surveillance machine,” said Bruce Schneier, who spoke at the meeting’s technical plenary. “This is not just about any particular country or individual action. We need to work broadly to fix the problems of today and tomorrow.”
“At the IETF technical plenary, participants agreed that the current situation of pervasive surveillance represents an attack on the Internet,” said Stephen Farrell, one of the IETF’s two Security Area Directors. “While there are challenges isolating the specific areas of attack that IETF protocols can mitigate, all of the working groups that considered the topic have started planning to address the threat using IETF tools that can mitigate aspects of the problem.”
The Internet depends upon standards developed in an open and transparent manner. Openness allows any interested party to participate, review, critique, or question the work of others. Transparency provides visibility into all steps of the process and an appropriate audit trail for inspection. Broad consensus, after review from a wide range of interests and perspectives, fosters agreement on the resulting standards.
“The IETF is taking steps to develop the technical specifications to improve the privacy and security of the Internet,” said Russ Housley, Chair of the Internet Architecture Board. “However, others need to take on the non-technical aspects that are part of a comprehensive response to mass surveillance on the Internet.”
In nearly 30 years, the IETF has published more than 4500 documents that describe standards for the fundamental technologies and widely used services on today’s global Internet. IETF participation is open to any interested individual and includes experts from industry, academia, and government from across the globe. While the work of the IETF mainly takes place online to reduce barriers to participation, its in-person meetings bring together participants three times each year at locations around the world.
For archives of video and other materials from the meeting, see:
http://www.ietf.org/live/
For more information about the IETF 88 meeting, see:
http://www.ietf.org/meeting/88/index.html
About the Internet Engineering Task Force
The Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) is the Internet’s premier technical standards body. It gathers a large open international community of network designers, engineers, operators, vendors, and researchers concerned with the evolution of the Internet architecture and the smooth operation of the Internet. The IETF seeks broad participation. The work of the IETF takes place online, largely through email lists, reducing barriers to participation and maximizing contributions from around the world. IETF Working Groups (WGs) are organized by topic into several areas (e.g., routing, transport, security, etc.). For more information, see: http://www.ietf.org/

The Council for American Private Education

The Council for American Private Education

The Council for American Private Education nominates private schools.  All schools will be honored at a ceremony in Washington, D.C., November 18 and 19.  In its 31-year history, the program has bestowed this coveted award on nearly 7,500 of America’s schools.

CAPE’s Board of Directors

President
The Rev. Daniel Heischman
Executive Director
National Association of Episcopal Schools
Vice President
Richard Ungerer
Executive Director
American Montessori Society
Secretary
Sr. John Mary Fleming, OP
Executive Director
Secretariat of Catholic Education
United States Conference of Catholic Bishops
Treasurer
Dan Egeler
President & CEO
Association of Christian Schools International
Member
Rabbi David Zwiebel
Executive Vice President
Agudath Israel of America
Member
Martha Rolley
At-Large Member
Director, K-12 Marketing
Apple, Inc.
Member
R. Jay Nelson
Executive Director
Association of Christian Teachers and Schools
Member
Virginia McHugh Goodwin
Executive Director
Association Montessori Internationale, USA
Member
Beverly Amico
Leader of Association Outreach and Development
Association of Waldorf Schools of N.A.
Member
Charles Glenn
At-Large Member
Professor Administration, Training and Policy Studies
Boston University
 
 
Member
David Koetje
Executive Director
Christian Schools International
Member
The Rev. Mark N. Wilhelm, Ph.D.
Associate Executive Director for Educational Partnerships Vocation and Education Unit
Evangelical Lutheran Church in America
Member
Terry Schmidt
Director, LCMS Schools
The Lutheran Church-Missouri Synod
Member
John E. Chubb
President
National Association of Independent Schools
Member
Bro. Robert R. Bimonte, FSC
President
National Catholic Educational Association
Member
Philip Patterson
Executive Director
National Christian School Association
Member
Donnie Peal
Executive Director
Oral Roberts University Educational Fellowship
Member
Mark Siegel, Esq.
At-Large Member
Executive Director
Oregon Federation of Independent Schools
Member
Dennis Plubell
Associate Director
Seventh-day Adventist Board of Education, K-12
Member
Gregg R. Schmill
Director, Commission on Lutheran Schools
Wisconsin Evangelical Lutheran Synod Schools
Member
Gary Arnold
Representative
Arkansas State CAPE
State CAPE Network Representative

Experts to Discuss U.S. Government Internet Surveillance Programs and Online Privacy at INET San Francisco

The event will also feature a panel discussion with the following participants:
·         Susan Freiwald, Professor, University of San Francisco School of Law
·         Matthew Sundquist, Former Facebook Privacy Team Member and Co-founder of Plot.ly
·         Declan McCullagh (moderator), Chief Political Correspondent, CNET
·         Paul Brigner, North America Regional Bureau Director, Internet Society
INET San Francisco will be held on October 2 from 6:00 pm until 8:30 pm PDT at CNET’s offices located at 235 2nd Street in San Francisco, CA. The event will also be streamed live for those unable to attend in person, http://new.livestream.com/internetsociety. For further information, including how to register, please visit http://www.internetsociety.org/inet-san-francisco/.
 Internet Society
Chapter Portal (AMS): https://portal.isoc.org