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International-UN-NGOs
Houlin Zhao - Director of the ITU wants the UN to regulate the Internet...
2005-03-30
The International Telecommunication Union is one of the most venerable of bureaucracies. Created in 1865 to facilitate telegraph transmissions, its mandate has expanded to include radio and telephone communications. But the ITU enjoys virtually no influence over the Internet. That remains the province of specialized organizations such as the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers, or ICANN; the Internet Engineering Task Force; the World Wide Web Consortium; and regional address registries. The ITU, a United Nations agency, would like to change that. "The whole world is looking for a better solution for Internet governance, unwilling to maintain the current situation," Houlin Zhao, director of the ITU's Telecommunication Standardization Bureau, said last year.
Who the hell told you that? Nobody's complained to me. Well, not about that, anyway...
Zhao, a former government official in China's Ministry of Posts and Telecommunications, has been in his current job since 1999. Though Zhao is far too diplomatic to state it directly, the ITU's increasing interest in the Internet could presage a power struggle between ITU, ICANN, and perhaps even the U.S. government, which retains some oversight authority over ICANN and appears content with the current structure.
Guess nobody's complained to them, either. About that.
In a series of speeches over the last year, Zhao has suggested that the ITU could become involved in everything from security and spam to managing how Internet Protocol addresses are assigned. The ITU also is looking into some aspects of voice over Internet Protocol--VoIP--communications, another potential area for expansion. "Countering spam is just one of many elements of protecting the Internet that include availability during emergencies and supporting public safety and law enforcement officials," Zhao wrote in December. Also, he wrote, the ITU "would take care of other work, such as work on Internet exchange points, Internet interconnection charging regimes, and methods to provide authenticated directories that meet national privacy regimes." .....
Posted by:3dc

#15  LOL BigE
Posted by: Shipman   2005-03-30 7:19:59 PM  

#14  Glereper -

I don't want all my Google restaurant searches to yield places where you get lamb kabobs, and empty rice bowls...
Posted by: BigEd   2005-03-30 6:40:11 PM  

#13  I have a better idea: Why not let NK and Iran regulate the Net?
Posted by: Glereper Craviter7929   2005-03-30 5:33:21 PM  

#12  We'll see what Al ("Inventor of the Internet") Gore has to say about that!
Posted by: radrh8r   2005-03-30 1:44:17 PM  

#11  IMHO the chinese are worried about losing their stranglehold on information control, and they are..... The UN sees a world-tax on the internet as the ultimate feathering of their nest. These should both be beaten like red-headed step children when they try and encroach on the net
Posted by: Frank G   2005-03-30 11:05:34 AM  

#10  ITU ... provides country code number... pounds sand...
Posted by: SR71   2005-03-30 10:56:07 AM  

#9  RB-ers : Since my day-job is in Telecomm, I am well aware of the ITU

director of the ITU’s Telecommunication Standardization Bureau...

The Telecommunication Standardization Bureau (TSB)
.....maintains the ITU-T Website, diffuses and provides information on the activities of the Sector including the schedule of meetings, TSB Circulars, Collective Letters, and all working documents
.....provides and updates the List of ITU-T Recommendations, the ITU-T Work Programme Database, the ITU-T Patent Statements Database, and the ITU-T Terms and Definitions Database (SANCHO)
.....provides and updates any other database as requested by the various study groups
.....centralizes and provides information on Alternative Calling Procedures - Call back
.....provides country code number assignment for telephone, data and other services
(i.e.) assigns 44 for Britian, 49 for Germany, and 1 for the US, Canada, and the Caribbean....
.....acts as Registrar for Universal International Freephone Numbers (UIFN)
.....provides technical information on international telecommunications and collaborates closely with the ITU Radiocommunication Sector and with the ITU Telecommunication Development Sector for matters of interest to developing countries
.....provides administrative and operational information through the ITU Operational Bulletin
.....ensures the editing of Recommendations and other texts approved by ITU-T, coordinates the editing publication and posting of the Recommendations

Usually populated by meddlesome bureaucrats from the various agencies in various countries... We probably send some odd FCC alumni...

Posted by: BigEd   2005-03-30 10:39:36 AM  

#8  Information is power. The Chinese understand that.
Posted by: mojo   2005-03-30 10:09:44 AM  

#7  Houlin "Howlin'" Zhao - barking at the moon and just as effective. The internet isn't yours to even think about, a**hole.
Posted by: Spot   2005-03-30 9:08:23 AM  

#6  Kalle - Um, short answer or long answer? Lol! ;-)
Posted by: .com   2005-03-30 8:16:39 AM  

#5  Why would we accept the diktats of a Red Chinese komissar over our creation, development, and use of the Internet?

Is there any UN agency that doesn't deserve to be abolished?
Posted by: Kalle (kafir forever)   2005-03-30 8:12:17 AM  

#4  What, is he nutz?

Zhao should check them chink networks if he wants to talk about spam, f00ktard! The most of open relays are there.

As for the rest of his 'ideas', ditto Jonathan.
Posted by: Sobiesky   2005-03-30 7:52:23 AM  

#3  The ITU is as effective as any tranzi burachary (why can I never spell that word) in implementing standards as anyone who has tried to take a modem or telephone from one country to another can attest to, i.e if the ITU were in control there is no way the Internet would exist.
Posted by: phil_b   2005-03-30 7:18:19 AM  

#2  What, again? There must be quiet, level-eight-on-the-Richter-scale rumblings in Chinese society for the oligarchy to continue making this demand. Or else they anticipate such rumblings in the future, and are acting prophylactically.
Posted by: trailing wife   2005-03-30 7:10:36 AM  

#1  The UN can have my broadband connection when they pry it from my cold, dead network card.
Posted by: Jonathan   2005-03-30 6:52:15 AM  

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