TheJournal.ie uses cookies. By continuing to browse this site you are agreeing to our use of cookies. Click here to find out more »
Dublin: 8 °C Tuesday 21 May, 2013

Internet freedom not to be curbed: UN telecoms head

A review the 24-year-old UN telecom regulations kicked off today amid insistence that plans to control internet freedoms are “unfounded”.

Hamadoun Toure, chief of the UN's telecommunication agency
Hamadoun Toure, chief of the UN's telecommunication agency
Image: Sang Tan/AP/Press Association Images

INTERNET FREEDOM WILL not be curbed or controlled, the head of the UN telecommunications body, Hamadoun Toure, said as a meeting to review the 24-year-old telecom regulations kicked off Monday.

Such claims are “completely (unfounded),” Toure, secretary general of the International Telecommunication Union, told AFP.

“I find it a very cheap way of attacking” the conference, he said, as the World Conference on International Telecommunications (WCIT-12) set off in Dubai to review regulations reached in 1988.

Earlier, Toure told participants at the conference that the Internet freedom of expression will not be touched during the discussions at the meeting.

“Nothing can stop the freedom of expression in the world today, and nothing in this conference will be about it,” he said.

“I have not mentioned anything about controlling the Internet.”

Google has been vocal in warning of serious repercussions on the Internet if proposals made by member states are approved at the WCIT-12 meeting, including permitting censorship over legitimate content.

“Some proposals could permit governments to censor legitimate speech — or even cut off Internet access,” said Bill Echikson, Google’s head of Free Expression in Europe, Middle East and Africa in a statement on Friday.

The Internet giant is also arguing that the ITU, which is the UN agency for information communication technologies, is not the right body to address Internet issues.

“Although the ITU has helped the world manage radio spectrum and telephone networks, it is the wrong place to make decisions about the future of the Internet,” Echikson said.

“Only governments have a vote at the ITU,” he pointed out.

But Toure, whose Geneva-based organisation has 193 member states and over 700 private-sector entities and academic institutions, said that “consensus” is the way to make decisions at the agency.

He also dismissed claims that the meetings in Dubai were secretive, telling reporters that the sessions are open.

- © AFP, 2012

Column: How social media became a very real battleground

Read next:

Comments (7 Comments)

  • the free and open internet must be protected at all costs.noone should have the right to have control over it.i dont trust anyone with that kind of power.

    Reply
  • Phewww!
    That’s a load off my mind coming from a deeply flawed organisation. That statement to me makes about as much sense as a pin in a balloon factory.
    UN = Useless Nonces

    Reply
  • Scientists and engineers, working largely ignored by the rest of the world, created the internet. Now politicians are trying to stick their nose into it. Well hey, it’s not your ballgame! Go back and solve the global economic crisis, and leave well enough alone!

    Reply
  • When I hear someone like this saying stuff like ‘Such claims are completely unfounded’ – why is it that I automatically assume the opposite is true?

    Reply
  • One word ” Tor “

    Reply
    • “is slow”. There, fixed that for you.

      Tor is useless if you are trying to do anything more than load a plain text file like its the early 90′s. Also regardless of the speed, why would I want to host an exit node when it could be someone trying to get kiddie porn but exposing my IP? “Sorry judge, I wasn’t downloading kiddie porn, I was just facilitating it through my network”.

      Reply
  • Damien 04/12/12 #

    if massive decisions about the future of the internet are too be made, they shouldn’t be made by governments that barely know how to use it never mind how it works. an independent commission comprised of the largest Internet companies giving their advice and direction would be a good start as their business’s depend on the web so they would have its best interest at heart I think.

    Reply

Add New Comment