Aotearoa Maori Internet Organisation - New Zealand
More directly, in order to make the internet a more supportive place for Maori culture and identity, AMIO will work directly with Maori internet developers who can become authors and creators of web functions and web structures. This means moving on from just web design and email list management to web programming, application development, and communications enhancements to better suit Maori styles and values of communications. In addition, AMIO will support any non-Maori organisation that wishes to advance Maori in IT. AMIO also envisions advanced online community building systems that promote Maori culture and discourses.
AMIO will also participate in and seek relationships with many national and international IT bodies. Activities may include:
- engaging in government submission processes on legislation
- representing Maori on government consultation processes
- participating in international discussions and forums that impact Maori
- presenting national submissions and surveys that concern the .nz internet space
- making a submission on behalf of Maori to protect .iwi.nz and .maori.nz
- sending a representative to a community conference to speak about Maori intellectual property (IP) rights and at least one delegate to the World Summit on the Information Society (WSIS) Global Forum of Indigenous People and the Information Society (Geneva, December 2003)
- sending a delegate to the Communities Online conference in Wellington, New Zealand to discuss lessons learned on the internet for Maori organisations and IP rights
- approaching a cybersquatter who has reserved many Iwi and other sensitive Maori domain names (with the intent to sell them back to Maori organisations at high prices).
- encouraging InternetNZ to implement international domain names (IDNs) to enable Maori to represent their language on the internet.
AMIO was formed by several former executives of the mostly defunct NZ Maori Internet Society. AMIO representatives say that they formed the group in response to growing frustration among Maori online developers at the apparent disappearance of the sole Maori Internet representative.
Press release ("Maori have internet representative/support body", dated November 5 2003) forwarded by Michael Gurstein to the CommunityInformatics list server on November 8 2003 (click here to access the archives); AMIO website; and email from Karaitiana Taiuru to The Communication Initiative on January 8 2007.
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