Newsletters
News & Information for Technology Purchasers NewsFactor Sites:       NewsFactor.com     Enterprise Security Today     CRM Daily     Business Report     Sci-Tech Today  
   
Home Enterprise I.T. Cloud & Virtualization Applications Unified Communications More Topics...
Build Apps 5x Faster
For Half the Cost
Enterprise Cloud Computing

On Force.com
E-Commerce
Unlock The Potential In Your People
Average Rating:
Rate this article:  
At ITU Net Conference in Dubai, Russian Proposal Withdrawn
At ITU Net Conference in Dubai, Russian Proposal Withdrawn

By Barry Levine
December 10, 2012 2:02PM

    Bookmark and Share
A number of countries, such as China, already control and repress the Internet in their countries, so the practical effects of any revised ITU treaty may not be substantial. However, critics of greater governmental control contend that an ITU treaty that legalizes such conduct could justify that behavior, and could lead to even more repression.
 



While the news out of the closed international conference in Dubai about the Internet has been spotty, there is word that a coalition led by Russia has withdrawn a proposal that would have given governments more powers to control the Web. The plan, presented as part of discussions about a new global treaty, had been opposed by Western countries.

The Russian plan had been backed by China, Saudi Arabia, Algeria, Sudan and the United Arab Emirates, while the U.S., Canada and Europe, among other countries, have opposed additional governmental controls. About 150 member countries of the International Telecommunications Union are represented at the conference, which has been taking place for slightly more than a week. The conference ends Friday.

Other Plans Circulating

The ITU treaty under discussion has not been revised since it went into effect in 1988, prior to the launch of the World Wide Web.

The proposal from the Russian bloc would have allowed countries greater control over online communications, and greater control over the allocation of Internet addresses, a task currently overseen by an independent group: ICANN, or the Internet Corp. for the Assignment of Names and Numbers. The Russian proposal also included provisions for "equal rights to manage the Internet" among all governments, including rights to control technical matters.

One Western diplomat told Reuters news service that there are other plans circulating that are similar to the one from the Russian coalition. The ITU usually works by consensus, but, this year, it may come down to voting.

The U.S. position is that the relatively free rein given the Internet should continue. However, the Western nations are in a minority if it comes to a vote, and they could end up refusing to sign the treaty or signing it and exercising their right to opt out of certain parts.

Free Net 'Under Threat'

A number of countries, such as China, already control and repress the Internet in their countries, so the practical effects of any treaty may not be substantial. However, critics of greater governmental control contend that a treaty that legalizes such conduct could justify that behavior, and could lead to even more repression.

Additionally, the technical control of the Net, and the assignment of addresses, has been conducted under independent organizations. A treaty that allowed authoritarian governments participation in international technical control could have a permanently damaging effect on the growth of online communications.

The Western countries are not united on all issues. A proposal from Europe, for instance, would charge content providers for marketing their content in countries other than their own, a kind of content toll fee. It is opposed by major U.S. Internet companies, including Google, Facebook and Amazon Relevant Products/Services.

In an essay posted online last month, "father of the Internet" Vinton Cerf, currently a Google vice president, said that a "free and open Net is under threat" by the actions at the conference. Cerf has said that the ITU has a role to play, such as helping to provide order in developing markets for radio spectrum and telephone networks, but that the conference, where only governments get to vote, "is the wrong place to make decisions about the future of the Internet."
 

Tell Us What You Think
Comment:

Name:



Salesforce.com is the market and technology leader in Software-as-a-Service. Its award-winning CRM solution helps 82,400 customers worldwide manage and share business information over the Internet. Experience CRM success. Click here for a FREE 30-day trial.


 E-Commerce
1.   A Terabyte's the Limit Now at Flickr
2.   Facebook Aims To Be Ad Colossus
3.   Seamless and GrubHub Join Forces
4.   Google Accused of U.K. Tax Trickery
5.   Stand Turns iPad Into Cash Register


advertisement
Facebook Aims To Be Ad ColossusFacebook Aims To Be Ad Colossus
Advertising tools central to comeback.
Average Rating:
Groupon Shares Up as Losses NarrowGroupon Shares Up as Losses Narrow
While transforming daily deals model.
Average Rating:
Crowdsourcing: Facebook's Next Buy?Crowdsourcing: Facebook's Next Buy?
Israeli press says Waze price up to $1B.
Average Rating:
Product Information and Resources for Technology You Can Use To Boost Your Business

Enterprise Hardware Spotlight
Dell Kills Its Public Cloud Effort, Will Offer Partner Marketplace
Putting the kibosh on its efforts to build out a public cloud, Dell has announced a new program to offer a choice of cloud Infrastructure-as-a-Service through a central marketplace of partners.
 
Dell's Dismal Quarter Shows PC Maker's Challenges
Dell's financial decay worsened during its latest quarter as the company slashed its personal computer prices in response to the growing popularity of smartphones and tablets in the beleaguered industry.
 
U.S. Defense Department Gives iOS 6 Security OK
In a vote of confidence for Apple's iOS devices, the Defense Department has given the all-clear for employees to use iPads and iPhones for work. But only those running iOS 6, and only if issued by the government.
 

Mobile Enterprise Spotlight
Google Adds Conversational Search to Chrome
If you like chatting with Siri, sending voice texts while driving or telling your Xbox when to pause or rewind a DVD, you're going to enjoy the upgrade to Google's Chrome browser.
 
HTC Execs Bolt, Sales Slide. Is the End Near for the Company?
What's going on with HTC? A string of executives quitting and slowing sales for new phone models are raising questions about the health of this major phone maker. Is the end in sight?
 
Walter De Brouwer's Magical Medical Tricorder
In cluttered old offices rooted in the past, Walter De Brouwer works feverishly to conjure the future, hammering away on a gadget that promises to revolutionize the way we monitor our health.
 

Enterprise Technology Spotlight
New Nvidia Chip Boosts Citrix Graphics for Remote Workers
The latest Nvidia Graphics Processing Unit (GPU) promises to boost remote graphics sharing through the Citrix remote desktop service. The new chip delivers better graphics for remote workers.
 
Security Alert: Beware of Tiffany Trojan on the Attack
Malware writers are using a luxury name to hack your PC. Security watchdog Sophos reports e-mails appearing to be from Tiffany.com carry an attachment that can install a malicious Trojan on your PC.
 
Blue Coat Beefs Up Big Data Security with Solera Buy
California-based Blue Coat Systems is expanding into Big Data security in the advanced threat protection space. The company has snapped up Intel-backed Solera Networks for its DeepSee platform.
 

Navigation
NewsFactor Network
Home/Top News | Enterprise I.T. | Cloud & Virtualization | Applications | Unified Communications | Mobile Tech | Hardware | Business Intelligence
World Wide Web | Network Security | Data Storage | Small Business | Microsoft/Windows | Apple/Mac | Linux/Open Source | Personal Tech
Press Releases
NewsFactor Network Enterprise I.T. Sites
NewsFactor Technology News | Enterprise Security Today | CRM Daily

NewsFactor Business and Innovation Sites
Sci-Tech Today | NewsFactor Business Report

NewsFactor Services
FreeNewsFeed | Free Newsletters | XML/RSS Feed

About NewsFactor Network | How To Contact Us | Article Reprints | Careers @ NewsFactor | Services for PR Pros | Top Tech Wire | How To Advertise

Privacy Policy | Terms of Service
© Copyright 2000-2013 NewsFactor Network. All rights reserved. Article rating technology by Blogowogo. Member of Accuserve Ad Network.