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Internet governance - System error - Governments squabble over new rules for

rlp

Dec 1st 2012 | from the print edition

THE rules of the internet decide its speed, safety, accessibility, flexibility

and unity. They therefore matter not just to computer enthusiasts, but to

everyone with a stake in the modern world. On December 3rd officials from more

than 150 countries, plus do-gooders, geeks and other interested parties, will

meet in Dubai to argue about how to run the network and fight over who should

control it.

Since the internet s creation, a ragtag bunch of academics, engineers, firms

and non-profit outfits have been in charge. That delights innovators but has

been a nightmare for the tidy-minded, and especially for authoritarian

governments. They would like the net to be run like the world s telephone

system, with tight standards and clearly set charges. The Dubai meeting brings

the chance to write new rules, with a review of an elderly treaty: the

International Telecommunication Regulations.

America, the European Union and other Western countries are trying to defend

the chaotic status quo. Against them are Russia, China and many African and

Arab states which claim that the internet undermines national laws while

enriching American firms. The meeting s host is the International

Telecommunication Union (ITU), a sluggish UN affiliate founded in 1865 to

regulate telegrams, but which now deals with satellite flight-paths and radio

frequencies. Its influence has waned since telecoms liberalisation.

Some think it obsolete. Certainly its opaque and bureaucratic style dismays

those steeped in the internet s open culture. Larry Downes, a commentator who

blogs for Forbes, says the ITU's press releases read like weird dispatches

from Dickensian England . It has published only a few draft documents for Dubai

and has yet to vote on whether the public can attend any of the discussions.

Though the ITU s president, Hamadoun Tour , dismisses the notion of a takeover

of the internet as ridiculous, some governments, including Russia, would like

the body to play a bigger role. In particular, they would like it to run the

internet s address system, in place of ICANN, an unusual charity registered in

California and supervised from a distance by America s commerce department.

Critics think this gives the American authorities unjustified powers, for

example to boot undesirable websites off the internet. Mr Tour says such

matters are outside the Dubai meeting s scope, but he has little power to stop

delegates raising them.

America wants to shield the net from the treaty, but its diplomats fear that a

broad coalition is taking shape against them. They hope to fend off most of the

450 or so proposed amendments. Many seem innocuous, or even worthwhile: for

example, calling for international co-operation against fraud, child abuse or

spam. But Terry Kramer, the head of America s 122-strong delegation, says that

some of these hide attempts to facilitate or legitimise censorship of political

speech. America decries any wording, however mealy-mouthed, that could increase

governments control over content.

A fiercer row is brewing about the rules for online businesses. High charges

for international phone calls once helped funnel cash from rich countries to

state-owned networks in developing ones. Much of that traffic is now on the

internet, hitting national operators profits and governments foreign-exchange

reserves. An alliance of poor countries and network operators wants businesses

that depend on broadband networks, such as Google, Facebook and Microsoft, to

pay towards their construction and upkeep.

Not joining the dots

One proposal is that the most popular websites, such as YouTube or Facebook,

should be billed for the data they send, as if they were making phone calls. At

the moment an American web firm pays no more to serve data to customers in

Dhaka than in Detroit. But if the cost of serving users varied by location, web

firms might start to shun far-flung customers, says Karen Mulberry of the

Internet Society, which represents the network s engineers.

Meanwhile a group of Europe s big telecoms firms, the European

Telecommunications Network Operators Association (ETNO), is demanding that

governments outlaw the introduction of network neutrality rules, which are

already in force in countries such as the Netherlands and Chile. These rules

require operators to grant equal priority to all internet traffic, and prevent

them from charging higher prices for fast lanes and other premium services.

Luigi Gambardella, ETNO s chairman, says operators cannot continue to invest in

broadband infrastructure without a fairer share of the revenues it generates.

Advocates of network neutrality worry that this is an attempt to erect

tollbooths on the internet. They say network-neutrality rules are needed to

ensure that the internet provides a level playing field for innovative

start-ups, and is not simply run in a way that maximises profits for incumbent

network operators. Geoff Huston, a network scientist, thinks former telephone

monopolies exaggerate their importance to the web. They are dinosaurs fighting

over the last water in the swamp, he says.

Fears of an anti-Western putsch in Dubai, handing control of the internet to

authoritarian governments, are overblown. Though in theory the ITU works by

majority vote, in practice agreements are almost always reached by consensus.

Moreover, the ITU has no power to foist rules on governments that refuse to

bargain. A bigger danger is therefore deadlock. That might encourage a large

pack of nations to set up their own internet regime, making communication with

the rest of the world more costly and more complicated.

from the print edition | International