Subscribe free to our newsletters via your
. Space Industry and Business News .




INTERNET SPACE
US says will oppose major revisions of global telecom rules
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Oct 08, 2012


The United States will oppose any major revision to 24-year-old global telecommunications regulations at an international conference in December, the head of the US delegation said Monday, insisting the Internet must remain free and open.

"We need to avoid suffocating ... the Internet space through well-meaning but overly-proscriptive proposals that would seek to control content or seek to mandate routing and payment practices," said Terry Kramer, the special envoy named for World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT) in Dubai at the end of the year.

Speaking to reporters in Geneva, Kramer said Washington was eager to cooperate with other nations to reach a consensus on alterations to global regulations set up by the UN's International Telecommunication Union (ITU) in 1988, but stressed that only minimal changes would be acceptable.

Kramer reiterated Washington's opposition to proposals from a number of countries to expand the ITU's authority to regulate the Internet, insisting, for instance, that his country did not want cyber security to fall under the UN agency's mandate.

While acknowledging a sharp hike in hacking and cyber crimes, with around 67,000 so-called malware attacks reported around the world every day, the US ambassador insisted that ITU regulations were "not an appropriate or useful venue to address cyber security."

"There are a lot of cyber threats but the nature of cyber issues requires agility, it requires a technical expertise, and it requires a distributed effort, so we are very sensitive about any one organisation taking on the sole role of solving cyber threats," he explained.

Kramer also said that Washington strongly disagreed with a proposal from the European Telecommunications Network Operators (ETNO) calling for network operators to be able to charge for sending content on to Internet users.

"Making content generation more costly and uneconomical will likely lead many content providers and non-profits to restrict or charge for downloads, even leading to black-outs in less developed countries," he said, urging nations "not to kill the content golden goose."

Kramer also said that the US strongly opposed proposals from some "non-democratic nations" for the tracking and monitoring of data routing, which he cautioned "makes it very easy for nations to monitor traffic," including content and customer information.

The ITU regulations in place for nearly a quarter of a decade "have been a huge success," Kramer said, insisting this was because they addressed only "high-level principals" in a non-proscriptive manner.

If few or no changes were made to them during the December meeting, he said, "I think it would not be a terrible outcome at all."

The Internet today, he stressed, "is a very vibrant and dynamic place ... Anything that seeks to put structure and control and limitations around that is a very worrisome philosophical trend for us."

.


Related Links
Satellite-based Internet technologies






Comment on this article via your Facebook, Yahoo, AOL, Hotmail login.

Share this article via these popular social media networks
del.icio.usdel.icio.us DiggDigg RedditReddit GoogleGoogle








INTERNET SPACE
Games play into Facebook's future
San Francisco (AFP) Oct 7, 2012
As investors agonize over Facebook's future, the online social network used by a seventh of the world's population isn't forgetting the importance of play. Nearly a quarter of Facebook members play online and developers of game applications are keenly tuned into the trend of using smartphones or tablets to connect to the social network. With 235 million folks taking part in games at Face ... read more


INTERNET SPACE
Angry Birds, Star Wars team up for new go

YouTube launches new global channels

Building 3D Structures from a 2D Template

Google, publishers end long-running copyright case

INTERNET SPACE
Raytheon to provide Joint Tactical Terminal radios with latest security features to US Navy

Northrop Grumman Awarded Contract to Extend BACN Communications Connectivity to the Tactical Edge

Hughes Awarded Custom SATCOM Solutions Contract by GSA

4 SOPS begins testing newest AEHF satellite

INTERNET SPACE
SpaceX On Course For Crew Resupply Cargo Delivery To Space Station

SpaceX craft on way to ISS in first supply run

Orbital Begins Antares Rocket Operations at Mid-Atlantic Regional Spaceport

H-IIB Launch Service Privatization

INTERNET SPACE
Air Force launces third GPS Block IIF satellite aboard Delta IV

Twin Galileo satellites fuelled and ready for launch

Northrop Grumman to Improve Performance of MEMS Inertial Sensors for DARPA

Lockheed Martin Delivers Propulsion Core for the First GPS III Satellite

INTERNET SPACE
Boeing Forecasts Air Cargo Growth Driven by Globalization and Trade

JAL to extend Japan-China flight cuts amid row

Lockheed Martin Announces New Solution to Reduce Airport Congestion and Improve Overall Airspace Efficiency

New Brazilian facility for Eurocopter

INTERNET SPACE
Origin of ultra-fast manipulation of domain walls discovered

Materials scientists prevent wear in production facilities in the electronics industry

Visionary transparent memory a step closer to reality

Acoustic cell-sorting chip may lead to cell phone-sized medical labs

INTERNET SPACE
SMOS has a better look at salinity

Digital Map Products to Discuss the New Rules for Communicating with Residents

Apple CEO sorry for maps shortcomings

Landslide mapping in the Swiss Alps

INTERNET SPACE
Pollution row strangles Italian steel giant ILVA

S. Korean villagers evacuate after toxic leak

Council of war gathers for world's biodiversity crisis

Mobiles phones getting less toxic: researcher




The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2014 - Space Media Network. AFP, UPI and IANS news wire stories are copyright Agence France-Presse, United Press International and Indo-Asia News Service. ESA Portal Reports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additional copyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by Space Media Network on any Web page published or hosted by Space Media Network. Privacy Statement