US signs on to international principles for 6G

By Alexandra Kelley, Feb 27, 2024
https://www.nextgov.com/emerging-tech/2024/02/us-signs-international-principles-6g/394506/


In conjunction with nine other countries, the U.S. released six new principles 
intended to guide a global 6G wireless connectivity adoption.

The White House issued a joint statement together with the governments from 
Australia, Canada, the Czech Republic, Finland, France, Japan, the Republic of 
Korea, Sweden and the United Kingdom on a series of new shared principles on 6G 
spectrum research and development.

Shared on Monday, the six principles are focused on securing global 
telecommunications infrastructure and will help inform relevant policy 
adoption. They include installing technology systems that protect national 
security; secure individual communications and privacy; work with industry 
partners to set inclusive international standards; cooperate to enable 
interoperability and innovation; ensure global connectivity is both affordable 
and sustainable; and manage spectrum allocations.

“We believe this to be an indispensable contribution towards building a more 
inclusive, sustainable, secure, and peaceful future for all, and call upon 
other governments, organizations, and stakeholders to join us in supporting and 
upholding these principles,” the press release reads.

Sixth generation — or 6G — spectrum is the planned step up from 5G that is 
currently under development in many nations to allow for greater data 
transmission at a faster rate across digital networks.

As the foundation for modern communications, including the personalized and 
hyperconnected internet-of-things, telecommunications infrastructure and its 
security at a hardware and software level have become a geopolitical talking 
point.

The shared principles aim to foster an international agreement in how to 
develop and deploy more secure 6G technologies and architectures. This includes 
researching how more emergent systems — namely artificial intelligence, 
software-defined networking, and virtualization — can be leveraged for greater 
security and interoperability.

Finland and Sweden are home to telecom companies Nokia and Ericsson, 
respectively, which were listed as industry partners in research on 5G wireless 
communications prototyping by the Pentagon in 2020.

By contrast, China — home to telecom provider Huawei, whose systems have been 
prohibited by U.S. oversight agencies due to spyware and surveillance concerns 
— is notably absent from the list of nations joining the 6G principles.

“Collaboration and unity are key to resolving pressing challenges in the 
development of 6G, and we hereby declare our intention to adopt relevant 
policies to this end in our countries, to encourage the adoption of such 
policies in third countries, and to advance research and development and 
standardization of 6G network,” the release said.

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