DWeb Principles
From DWeb Vancouver
Copied from the DWeb Community site https://getdweb.net/principles
01. Technology for Human Agency
- We stand for technology that enables the primacy of people as beneficiaries of the technology, by upholding their security, privacy and self-determination.
- We urge coexistence and interoperability, and discourage walled gardens.
- We value open source code as a fundamental building block of an open and inclusive Web.
- We aim for peer-to-peer relationships, rather than hierarchical control and power imbalance.
- Our technologies must minimize surveillance and manipulation of people’s behavior, and optimize for social benefits and empower individuals to determine how and why their data is used.
- We believe that multiple technical means will be more effective than a single technical solution to achieve ethical and people-centric outcomes.
02. Distributed Benefits
- We believe that decentralized technologies will be most beneficial to society when the rewards and recognition of their success, monetary or otherwise, are distributed among those who contributed to that success.
- If that is infeasible, proportionate benefit should flow to the community at large.
- High concentration of organizational control is antithetical to the decentralized web.
03. Mutual Respect
- We support and encourage clear codes of conduct to ensure respectful behavior and accountability.
- We expect participants to remain mindful of, and take responsibility for, their speech and behavior, by acting out of respect for others and respecting physical and emotional boundaries.
- We stand for open and transparent organizational practices, motivations, and governance, in a manner that actively pursues equity, mutual trust, and respect.
04. Humanity
- The objective of building a decentralized web is to protect human rights and empower people, especially those who experience systemic inequity and prejudice.
- We stand for people having agency over their own data and relationships, rights to free expression, privacy, and knowledge, as these are essential to human empowerment and dignity.
- We condemn the use of distributed tools for activities antithetical to human rights, such as human trafficking; sexual, mental, or physical abuse; and arms trading.
- We encourage building with harm-reduction in mind, and support the adoption of mechanisms that mitigate the potential for abuse, and consideration of those ‘not at the table’ — not connected, not users, and the disadvantaged.
- We encourage the development of tools and applications in many languages and forms, with a high degree of accessibility.
05. Ecological Awareness
- We believe projects should aim to minimize ecological harm and avoid technologies that worsen environmental health.
- We value systems that work towards reducing energy consumption and device resource requirements, while increasing device lifespan by allowing repair, recycling, and recovery.
Related Principles
- CARE Principles for Indigenous Data Governance
- Center for Humane Technology's Policy Principles
- Contract for the Web
- Decentralization Off The Shelf
- Design Justice Principles
- Detroit Digital Justice Coalition Principles
- Elinor Ostrom's Principles for Governing the Commons
- The Ethical Source Principles
- Feminist Data Manifest-No
- Feminist Principles of the Internet
- Internet Research Task Force Research into Human Rights Protocol Considerations
- PLAN Systems Technology Design Principles
- Secure Scuttlebutt Principles
- United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights