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What went wrong at WCIT : Comments
By Paul Budde, published 24/12/2012A significant cause of the split in World Conference on International Telecommunications is the misalignment of definitions of the internet.
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Posted by tomw, Monday, 31 December 2012 11:15:08 AM
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WCIT is convened by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU), a body now uder the UN (but which is actually much older than the UN), which coordinates telecommunications internationally. The WCIT meetings are frequently controversial, as they deal with how telecommunication operates internationally and, to some extent, within countries. But this controversy is usually only noticed by telecommunications professionals, whereas the debate over Internet governance received attention in the popular press.
Paul Budde argues that a key problem is difference in the definition of the Internet between the USA and the rest of the world, with the USA including the information content of the Internet, as well as the telecommunication infrastructure. I am not so sure this is the problem. The main issue is that countries want to control their telecommunications infrastructure and what their citizens use it for (some more than others). The Internet was largely developed by the USA and is still largely controlled by US based organizations. As a result the USA can take the high moral ground about Internet freedom, while being able to control its use domestically.
For an understanding of the way the Internet was envisioned and the attitude of the ITU to it, I recommend Carl Malamud's 1992 book "Exploring the Internet: A Technical Travelogue": in which he reports on discussion with Internet pioneers including Vint Cerf and Geoff Huston, as well as ITU bureaucrats: http://museum.media.org/eti/