Zum Thema Guttenberg/Kroes ist wahrscheinlich schon alles gesagt, aber eben noch nicht von allen. Auch mir war es wichtig, die Ernennung von Guttenberg zum Berater der Kommission für die "No Disconnect"-Strategie nicht unkommentiert zu lassen und ich habe dazu etwas - in englischer Sprache - auf 
content and carrier geschrieben, was ich ausnahmsweise hier einfach cross-poste:
It could have been the ultimate practical joke of this year.
Neelie Kroes, Vice-President of the European Commission, 
appointed Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg "to promote internet freedom globally". According to her press release, this "
appointment
 forms a key element of a new "No Disconnect Strategy" to uphold the 
EU's commitment to ensure human rights and fundamental freedoms are 
respected both online and off-line, and that internet and other 
information and communication technology (ICT) can remain a driver of 
political freedom, democratic development and economic growth."
But sadly, it is not a joke.
Guttenberg,
 who was briefly Germany's minister for economics and technology (Feb 
2009 until Oct 2009) and then minister of defense (until 1 March 2011), 
fell from grace when it was revealed that he had plagiarized large 
chunks of his doctoral thesis. Internet activists 
set up a wiki
 and within a few weeks managed to publicly document that 94.4 (!)  
percent of the pages in Guttenberg's thesis contained plagiarized text. 
Of course people made (and make) fun of Guttenberg, calling him 
"Googleberg" or "Doctor Copy & Paste", or promoting a 
"Guttenberg"-keyboard (for maximum efficiency, just Ctrl+C+V).Guttenberg, who had denied all allegations when he was first confronted (
"absurd allegation"),
 had to resign, the university stripped him of his degree, and the state
 prosecutor started investigations. In May 2011, the university's 
investigation came to the conclusion that Guttenberg 
"had manifestly and gravely breached the standards of good scientific practice and had cheated with intent"  (my translation, 
more information on the Guttenberg-case - in German - at the university's website).
 Not even a month ago, the state prosecutor came to the conclusion that 
Guttenberg had, with intent, committed criminal breaches of copyright in
 23  counts, but closed the case after Guttenberg payed 20.000 Euro to a
 charity (
press release of the state prosecutor's office,
 in German); this is a common way of dealing with petty crimes 
(misdemeanours) where there is no public interest in further prosecution
 (
section 153a of the German Code of Criminal Procedure act).
Guttenberg is not repentant: just three weeks ago he published a book called 
"Vorerst gescheitert" ("failed 
for now"),
 consisting of a long interview with a German journalist. He again 
denied any intent to plagiarize; rather he argued that the copying was 
the 
"fatal result of a chaotic and unsystematic mode of work", 
having copied from the internet and then mixed it up due to using at 
least 80 floppy disks (!) and four different computers  (more 
here, in German). The respected conservative daily 
FAZ commented: 
"Guttenberg has not lost his ability to talk nonsense".
Guttenberg has no relevant expertise in internet issues, at least no 
 such expertise seems to be documented, and neither Kroes nor her  
spokesperson came up with any evidence that Guttenberg ever had any  
original ideas, did any research or even just was involved with specific
  internet-related issues. Many German commenters are heavily critical 
of  Guttenberg's support for a German law which should block access to 
the  internet in case of (suspected) child pornography; the relevant act
 was  introduced when Guttenberg was minister of economics (but not by 
him)  under the title "Zugangserschwerungsgesetz", which translates as 
"Act to  make access [to the internet] more difficult"(!). The Act never
 came  into force and is in the process of being formally repealed, 
after  criticism not only by internet activists, but also by many law  
professors and constitutional scholars. Guttenberg defended the act and 
 implicitely accused the critics of being against blocking of child  
pornography-websites (see a newspaper report 
here, in German).
Guttenberg's wife was involved in a TV-series called "Tatort  Internet" (
"Crime Scene Internet"),
 which tried to lure potential  pedophiles into meeting underage girls 
and then exposed them on TV.  Although the faces of the suspected 
pedophiles were not shown (or  blurred), some of them could be identifed
 rather easily by TV-viewers.  The series came under heavy criticism, 
for instance by the Minister of  Justice 
who said "There
  is danger that innocent people are put in the pillory and the rule of 
 law would be in a precarious situation. This is a high risk".
So, first of all, Guttenberg (just recently) 
- has been stripped of his degree because of intellectual dishonesty, 
- was found to have been a multiple copyright-infringer, 
- and admitted only as much as that he was out of his depths when dealing with computers and the internet
In addition, Guttenberg has no relevant expertise or experience in internet issues.
Kroes, who was aware of all this, nevertheless thought it fit to appoint
 Guttenberg as her adviser. When she announced it, it still sounded like
 an impressive job  (and remember: it is supposed to be a 
key element of the strategy). In the 
press release it said that 
"Karl-Theodor
 zu Guttenberg will liaise with Member States, third countries and NGOs 
which are committed to work in this area and advise on how to advance 
the strategy in a co-ordinated and effective manner." Kroes is further quoted with: 
"I
 want  Karl-Theodor zu Guttenberg to champion this cause with 
governments and  NGOs and ensure it gets the attention, focus and 
support it deserves."
The reasons Kroes gave for this appointment are rather slim; pressed to justify her choice, 
she wrote:
"As he himself has acknowledged, if anyone understands
 the power of the internet, and its power to hold  authorities to 
account, it is Karl-Theodor [Guttenberg]. Anyone who has worked with  
Karl-Theodor – and I myself have done so closely when he was German  
Economics Minister – would recognise his great political abilities. But 
 what I also admire in him is his fresh and international outlook. [...]
If you are wondering why Karl-Theodor and not someone else, I 
would say  that I am looking for talent, not saints. I am asking him to 
do an  important job; nothing more, nothing less. I live in the future, 
not the  past."
This indeed is rather troubling: 
Kroes is at once arguing that it is "an important job", and that "talent" - plus a "fresh and international outlook" -
 is all that Guttenberg is bringing to this job.
 And she also thinks that Guttenberg gained relevant experience in 
internet-related issues by having been exposed on a Website as a 
multiple intentional copyright-infringer who cheated with intent in his 
thesis (which, by the way, she describes in an interesting euphemism as 
being "not a saint").
I don't think the regular Commission services would employ anyone 
just for having "talent" (at least I have not yet seen a  single 
concours of 
EPSO
 just checking for talent), and I doubt that an academic cheater who was
 stripped of his degree could pass the vetting process for any senior 
position within the Commission services. While I don't take offense with
 "forgiveness", the logic that Kroes claims is behind Guttenberg's 
appointment is  severely flawed: I doubt that Vice-President of the 
Commission Reding would  consider appointing a convicted criminal as an 
adviser on Justice  affairs and then argue: 
"if anyone understands the power of  law enforcement, it is XY, who served 10 years in jail".
After the initial reactions (I recommend taking look at the comments to Kroes' 
blog entry [and the 
German language version] and at the 
Kosmopolito-blog), the Commissioner retracted: in 
another blog entry she wrote: 
"There
 is no payment, no staff, no special treatment. He will be providing 
advice and assistance to me in a personal capacity. We will keep costs 
to a minimum, and I can assure you I’ll squeeze him for every good idea 
and every piece of feedback he has." Her spokesperson commented that "
People need to keep this choice in perspective; it is just one element of the wider no disconnect strategy".
So we are left to wonder: is this an important job, including the 
task to liaise with governments and NGOs and thus to "champion a cause" -
 all of which would require a clear mandate, duties and responsibilities
 - or is it merely a rather vague invitation to a personal friend of the
 Commissioner to share a few ideas, just having the EU pay for a few 
trips? Kroes' spokesperson explicitely stated that Guttenberg will not 
be a 
special adviser
 (who are under certain obligations under staff regulations, and who 
come in a paid and an unpaid variety), so we do not know what kind of 
relationship this should be, what (if any)  mandate Guttenberg has, 
which (if any) staff regulations apply, which confidentiality 
agreements, etc. etc.
Personally, I am also deeply sceptical about unpaid advisers, because
 they either have to be quite rich to be able to fulfill their tasks or 
they are in effect paid by someone else who is not necessarily disclosed
 or lacks transparency (Guttenberg is working for a US-based 
lobbying organisation / "think-tank", which by the way is not registered in the 
EU transparency register).
 I don't buy into conspiracy theories, which also abound in the comments
 on Kroes's blog entries (ACTA, PNR, NATO, everything is mixed in, all 
forming part of a supposed greater story), to me all of this looks more 
like a new chapter to "
The March of Folly".
The appointment of Guttenberg as an adviser (or whatever his position/function might turn out to be) not only severely discredits the whole 
No Disconnect-Strategy, it also 
shows an incredible lack of judgment by the Commissioner and her staff. Kroes 
stressed
 that Guttenberg was her choice and her idea, and she is at least to be 
commended for not trying to blame her (other) advisers for this abysmal 
decision. 
Kroes could have backed down: she could have apologized for not 
having thought this through, for having been distracted by more 
important issues and for not having paid enough attention to who should 
take this job. And then she could have cancelled the appointment of 
Guttenberg, to present a true expert as a new
 special adviser. I even waited a few days before writing this blog 
entry, because I thought Kroes might find a way out and get rid of 
Guttenberg. But instead of limiting the damage already done, Kroes chose
 to widen it and to defend Guttenbergs's choice. 
Obviously Kroes thinks that there are only some particularly 
concerned German internet activists who produce nothing more than a 
storm in a (German) teacup (at least that is what the comments of her 
spokesperson on the 
Kosmopolito-blog said, for instance 
here). 
I do not share this view. 
As evidenced - among others - by
 this blog post, there are people outside of Germany who do not believe 
in the wisdom of appointing a disgraced former politician to be an 
adviser in a field where he is not an expert and does not command the 
trust of the people he should "liaise" with. Critics include not only 
some hotheaded activists, but also many highly reputable academics, 
because appointing Guttenberg can only be seen as a deliberate 
provocation of the academic community and its values. This appointment 
will come back to haunt Kroes in any future decision she will take: as 
she showed such lack of judgment in appointing Guttenberg, how can she 
be trusted to show more judgment and take reasoned decisions in other 
matters? 
To sum it up: 
The appointment of Guttenberg was 
wrong, and the decision to stick with him casts a serious doubt on 
Kroes' overall power of judgment. 
PS: 
Kroes asked that we should judge 
"Karl-Theodor [Guttenberg]  ultimately on the quality of the advice he provides",
 which calls for that advice to be published in full (because otherwise 
how could we judge it?). If published, I am sure that there will be a 
wiki devoted to scrutinising this advice.