Internet Health Report: Difference between revisions

From MozillaWiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Update contributors)
(Also use research hub link for privacy included special edition)
 
(71 intermediate revisions by 9 users not shown)
Line 1: Line 1:
==About the Internet Health Report==
<span id="what-was-the-internet-health-report"></span>
== '''What was the Internet Health Report?''' ==


The Internet Health Report is Mozilla’s open source initiative to document and explain what’s happening to the health of the Internet.
The Internet Health Report was created in 2017 to document and explain what’s happening to the health of the internet from year to year. At the time, the Mozilla Foundation and Mozilla Corporation worked together to develop a framework for “internet health” that focused on five issue areas (Decentralization, Openness, Privacy &amp; Security, Web Literacy and Digital Inclusion) and the report was key to socializing the term and explaining what it means for the internet to be “healthy”.


The report’s goal is to provide a compelling, credible and broadly accessible source of information on the state of Mozilla’s priority Internet issues. The report is meant to serve both as a touchstone for those who track Internet issues and as an ‘issue platform’ that informs the work of the Mozilla community and our allies. It is meant to be a standalone publication, and a resource that can be remixed and repurposed in support of related initiatives. It highlights people's stories, analysis, research and data from the Mozilla Network, from the research and thinking of our allies and if needed, original research commissioned for the purpose of the report.
The report was designed to be “open source” in the sense that it drew on input from hundreds of people, as well as staff and allies of Mozilla. Then and today, its goal is to provide a compelling, credible and broadly accessible source of information on the state of Mozilla’s priority internet issues. It serves both as a touchstone for those who track internet issues, and as an ‘issue platform’ that informs the work of the Mozilla community and our allies.


The Report is available in 4 languages: English, German, French and Spanish. If you know a community that would like to translate the Report into their language, we want to hear from you.
After three editions using the internet health framework, MoFo’s programmatic focus narrowed to trustworthy AI, and the report pivoted with a slight shift in focus too.


===Related Links===
<span id="timeline"></span>
== '''Timeline''' ==


[https://internethealthreport.org/v01/ Internet Health Report 0.1. (prototype, 2017)]
{| class="wikitable"
|-
| style="text-align: left;"| 2017
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/research/library/internet-health-report-2017/ '''Internet Health Report 0.1'''] English, German, French and Spanish.
| style="text-align: left;"| “What’s helping (and what’s hurting) our largest global resource” ''This report was a prototype and planted a seed for further discussion about indicators of internet health, including in a custom-made [https://internethealthreport.consider.it online discussion forum].''
|-
| style="text-align: left;"| 2018
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/research/library/2018-internet-health-report/ '''Internet Health Report'''] English, German, French, Spanish
| style="text-align: left;"| “How healthy is the internet?” ''This was the first complete edition and included around 50 articles with stories, data visuals and analysis across a range of topics, translated into four languages.''
|-
| style="text-align: left;"| 2019
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/research/library/2019-internet-health-report/ '''Internet Health Report + Reading lists + Book'''] English, German, French, Spanish
| style="text-align: left;"| “How healthy is the internet?” ''This report included included the ability to create and share a personal reading list. It was published simultaneously as [https://www.transcript-publishing.com/978-3-8376-4946-8/internet-health-report-2019/ an open access book] by an academic publisher.''
|-
| style="text-align: left;"| 2019
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/research/library/privacy-included-rethinking-the-smart-home/ '''*Privacy Included: Rethinking the Smart Home'''] English only
| style="text-align: left;"| ''This special edition of the Internet Health Report was published as a companion to Mozilla’s 2019 *[https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/privacynotincluded/ Privacy Not Included] buyer’s guide. It was based on conversations with more than two dozen people working from different angles to better the global ecosystem for smart home devices.''
|-
| style="text-align: left;"| 2021
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/research/library/2020-internet-health-report/ '''Internet Health Report + 100 People'''] English only
| style="text-align: left;"| “A healthier internet is possible” ''This report included data visuals and three spotlight articles, plus a feature with 100 leaders who shared their healthy and unhealthy moments for the internet in 2020.''
|-
| style="text-align: left;"| 2022
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/research/library/internet-health-report-2022/ '''Internet Health Report + IRL Podcast'''] English only
| style="text-align: left;"| “AI in Real Life” ''This report included a compilation of facts and figures showing who has power over AI (and who doesn’t) and a podcast featuring over a dozen voices on AI worldwide.''
|}


[https://internethealthreport.org/ Internet Health Report website and blog]
<span id="what-was-the-mission-statement-of-the-report"></span>
== '''What was the mission statement of the report?''' ==


Quote: “The Internet Health Report articulates Mozilla’s voice and opinions. We forecast and reflect on ‘what can be done’ (and what ''is'' being done) by telling stories of people and initiatives that serve as exemplary prototypes for the innovations and collaborations necessary for systemic change.


==Who creates the Internet Health Report?==
“The report’s opinionated stance is rooted in research and evidence and its content is shaped by inputs from Mozilla’s staff, global communities and allies.”


The report lives in the Insights Team of MoFo under the leadership of Sam Burton. Solana Larsen is the Editor of the Report, Kasia Odrozek is the Project Coordinator, and Jairus Khan is the Outreach Coordinator. If you have any questions about the report, it is best to contact Kasia. Our extended team consist of Vojtech Sedlak (data analyst), Amira Dhalla (helps with Outreach), Kristina Shu (helps us with design) and many more across MoFo and MoCo who we involve on a temporary basis.
<span id="who-created-the-internet-health-report"></span>
== '''Who created the Internet Health Report?''' ==


The ambition of the Report is to be truly "open source" in order to improve the quality of the report and benefit from picking “the collective brain”. We want to encourage engagement and debate over the Internet’s health issues. Therefore we are seeking contributions from a range of people; subject matter experts, thought leaders, internal Mozilla stakeholders, feature writers, network members and the general public.  
The report was steered by the Foundation’s onetime Insights team under the leadership of Kasia Odrozek (director) and J. Bob Alotta (VP of Global Programs). The earliest editions were led by Sam Burton (former director) and Mark Surman (executive director) with the Policy team.


As for design and development we are working with a design agency [https://vizzuality.com/ Vizzuality], based in Madrid, Spain.
Solana Larsen was the editor of the Internet Health Report, working with Eeva Moore (engagement manager), Stefan Baack (research and data analyst), and Neha Ravella (research project manager).


==Contributors Framework==
Since its inception, the report counted on contributions from many, many other Mozillians, including from policy, product and marketing teams, and fellows.


[https://indicators.internethealthreport.org/?tab=Show%20all Public crowdsourcing process "How would you measure the health of the Internet?"]
<span id="who-was-the-audience-for-the-internet-health-report"></span>
== '''Who was the audience for the Internet Health Report?''' ==


* [https://mozillians.org/en-US/u/Solana/ Solana Larsen] is the editor of this report.
Over the years, the report narrowed its primary target audience to technology builders and policy makers/influencers, but it always enjoyed broad readership including from researchers, activists, journalists, and Mozilla supporters. The 2018 report launched at a time when global public awareness of privacy and big tech consolidation of power was only just beginning to take shape.
* Kasia Odrozek is the project manager.
* [https://mozillians.org/en-US/u/jairus/ Jairus Khan] is the outreach coordinator.


<span id="other-materials-and-links"></span>
== '''Other materials and links''' ==


==Who is the audience for the Internet Health Report?==
{| class="wikitable"
 
|-
There are three tiers of users we are targeting with the report. The highest priority targets are people using the report as a resource - members of the Internet Health movement. These are Internet Health Allies working day-to-day on Internet Health topics, Activists who work on Internet Health issues in their spare time and Researchers, academics researching internet health topics.
| style="text-align: left;"| 2019
 
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/initiatives/new-york-city-internet-health-report/ New York City Internet Health Report]
In the second tier of users are influencers and journalists. We want them to share and promote the report in their networks.
| style="text-align: left;"| A project by Mozilla senior fellow Meghan McDermott in collaboration with the NYC Mayor’s Office of the Chief Technology Officer.
 
|-
Finally we have the broader ‘public’ user. We’re not targeting the whole general public, but keen internet users. They have an understanding of some internet health topics but want to learn a little more.
| style="text-align: left;"| 2020
 
| style="text-align: left;"| [https://foundation.mozilla.org/en/blog/interview-youth-community-leaders-internet-health/ Community Leaders for Internet Health Report]
 
| style="text-align: left;"| Digital Grassroots’ Uffa Modey and Esther Mwema led an [http://digitalgrassroots.org/internet-health-report.html adaptation] of the report featuring eight internet community leaders from Belarus, Benin, Kenya, Mauritius and Uganda.
==Roadmap==
|}
 
The current target release date for the report is March 20, 2018.

Latest revision as of 21:15, 17 January 2025

What was the Internet Health Report?

The Internet Health Report was created in 2017 to document and explain what’s happening to the health of the internet from year to year. At the time, the Mozilla Foundation and Mozilla Corporation worked together to develop a framework for “internet health” that focused on five issue areas (Decentralization, Openness, Privacy & Security, Web Literacy and Digital Inclusion) and the report was key to socializing the term and explaining what it means for the internet to be “healthy”.

The report was designed to be “open source” in the sense that it drew on input from hundreds of people, as well as staff and allies of Mozilla. Then and today, its goal is to provide a compelling, credible and broadly accessible source of information on the state of Mozilla’s priority internet issues. It serves both as a touchstone for those who track internet issues, and as an ‘issue platform’ that informs the work of the Mozilla community and our allies.

After three editions using the internet health framework, MoFo’s programmatic focus narrowed to trustworthy AI, and the report pivoted with a slight shift in focus too.

Timeline

2017 Internet Health Report 0.1 English, German, French and Spanish. “What’s helping (and what’s hurting) our largest global resource” This report was a prototype and planted a seed for further discussion about indicators of internet health, including in a custom-made online discussion forum.
2018 Internet Health Report English, German, French, Spanish “How healthy is the internet?” This was the first complete edition and included around 50 articles with stories, data visuals and analysis across a range of topics, translated into four languages.
2019 Internet Health Report + Reading lists + Book English, German, French, Spanish “How healthy is the internet?” This report included included the ability to create and share a personal reading list. It was published simultaneously as an open access book by an academic publisher.
2019 *Privacy Included: Rethinking the Smart Home English only This special edition of the Internet Health Report was published as a companion to Mozilla’s 2019 *Privacy Not Included buyer’s guide. It was based on conversations with more than two dozen people working from different angles to better the global ecosystem for smart home devices.
2021 Internet Health Report + 100 People English only “A healthier internet is possible” This report included data visuals and three spotlight articles, plus a feature with 100 leaders who shared their healthy and unhealthy moments for the internet in 2020.
2022 Internet Health Report + IRL Podcast English only “AI in Real Life” This report included a compilation of facts and figures showing who has power over AI (and who doesn’t) and a podcast featuring over a dozen voices on AI worldwide.

What was the mission statement of the report?

Quote: “The Internet Health Report articulates Mozilla’s voice and opinions. We forecast and reflect on ‘what can be done’ (and what is being done) by telling stories of people and initiatives that serve as exemplary prototypes for the innovations and collaborations necessary for systemic change.

“The report’s opinionated stance is rooted in research and evidence and its content is shaped by inputs from Mozilla’s staff, global communities and allies.”

Who created the Internet Health Report?

The report was steered by the Foundation’s onetime Insights team under the leadership of Kasia Odrozek (director) and J. Bob Alotta (VP of Global Programs). The earliest editions were led by Sam Burton (former director) and Mark Surman (executive director) with the Policy team.

Solana Larsen was the editor of the Internet Health Report, working with Eeva Moore (engagement manager), Stefan Baack (research and data analyst), and Neha Ravella (research project manager).

Since its inception, the report counted on contributions from many, many other Mozillians, including from policy, product and marketing teams, and fellows.

Who was the audience for the Internet Health Report?

Over the years, the report narrowed its primary target audience to technology builders and policy makers/influencers, but it always enjoyed broad readership including from researchers, activists, journalists, and Mozilla supporters. The 2018 report launched at a time when global public awareness of privacy and big tech consolidation of power was only just beginning to take shape.

Other materials and links

2019 New York City Internet Health Report A project by Mozilla senior fellow Meghan McDermott in collaboration with the NYC Mayor’s Office of the Chief Technology Officer.
2020 Community Leaders for Internet Health Report Digital Grassroots’ Uffa Modey and Esther Mwema led an adaptation of the report featuring eight internet community leaders from Belarus, Benin, Kenya, Mauritius and Uganda.