> Right, so if we can interpret failure of service as interfering with Article 19 and 20, what else applies as interfering with human rights?
Oh, don't get me started. :) Given the shift to pandemic-forced remote education, there is a hot debate about "right to education" meaning "the state needs to ensure students have laptops and good Internet connection". Heck, there is even debate that "right to medical care" means "the state needs to regulate the root DNS servers", since a failure of the root DNS servers makes it difficult to get medical care in highly digitized societies.
I'm not making an argument for or against regulating root DNS, just highlighting the implications that human rights have in a "forced" digitized society.
> Is Article 19 and 20 mostly about non-interference, or is about obligations of service?
Why the dichotomy? If exercising a right can only be done via a service (thank 32 kilo base pairs for that), then the human rights can be interpreted as obligation of service. If your main portal to healthcare is a website, then your right to healthcare means that electricity, your ISP, root DNSs, the website itself all need to work for you to exercise your right.
Oh, don't get me started. :) Given the shift to pandemic-forced remote education, there is a hot debate about "right to education" meaning "the state needs to ensure students have laptops and good Internet connection". Heck, there is even debate that "right to medical care" means "the state needs to regulate the root DNS servers", since a failure of the root DNS servers makes it difficult to get medical care in highly digitized societies.
I'm not making an argument for or against regulating root DNS, just highlighting the implications that human rights have in a "forced" digitized society.
> Is Article 19 and 20 mostly about non-interference, or is about obligations of service?
Why the dichotomy? If exercising a right can only be done via a service (thank 32 kilo base pairs for that), then the human rights can be interpreted as obligation of service. If your main portal to healthcare is a website, then your right to healthcare means that electricity, your ISP, root DNSs, the website itself all need to work for you to exercise your right.