Adam Peake: Difference between revisions
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===Work With ICANN=== | ===Work With ICANN=== | ||
Adam Peake has been involved with ICANN since its inception. He was a member of the [[Public Interest Registry]] ([[. | Adam Peake has been involved with ICANN since its inception. He was a member of the [[Public Interest Registry]] ([[.org]]) Advisory Council, the non-commercial users constituency, and a member of the [[NAIS]] Project that contributed to the review of the At-Large elections and public representation and participation in [[ICANN]] in 2000-2001.<ref>[http://www.icann.org/en/committees/alac/peake.html ICANN]</ref> | ||
Revision as of 03:45, 13 February 2011
Country: | Japan |
Email: | ajp [at] glocom.ac.jp |
Facebook: | [adam peake Adam Peake] |
LinkedIn: | [adam peake Adam Peake] |
Adam Peake is an executive research fellow at the Center for Global Communications (GLOCOM), a research institute located in Tokyo.[1] He has been with GLOCOM since 1994 and he currently works on projects related to telecommunications and broadband policy, network and information security, and follow-up activities for the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS).
Mr. Peake participated in the G8 DOT Force where GLOCOM was the Japanese NPO representative. He has co-led GLOCOM’s work on WSIS; including GLOCOM’s role as facilitator of NGO/Civil Society participation in the Asia and Pacific Regional WSIS Conference in January 2003, and the WSIS thematic meeting “Tokyo Ubiquitous Network Conference” in May 2005. He has been a coordinator of the WSIS Civil Society Internet Governance Caucus since the Geneva Summit
His interests include the intersection of public policy and the internet, and promoting information and communication technologies within society.
Work With ICANN[edit | edit source]
Adam Peake has been involved with ICANN since its inception. He was a member of the Public Interest Registry (.org) Advisory Council, the non-commercial users constituency, and a member of the NAIS Project that contributed to the review of the At-Large elections and public representation and participation in ICANN in 2000-2001.[2]