----- Forwarded message from David Farber <[email protected]> -----

Date: Fri, 17 Aug 2012 09:02:18 -0400
From: David Farber <[email protected]>
Subject: [IP] State Department Wants You on ITAC Advisory, Opens All ITU docs
Reply-To: [email protected]
To: ip <[email protected]>



Begin forwarded message:

From: Dave Burstein <[email protected]>
Subject: State Department Wants You on ITAC Advisory, Opens All ITU docs
Date: August 17, 2012 8:54:53 AM EDT
To: Dave Farber <[email protected]>

Dave

I don't often send my reporting for the list, but I think this one may interest 
people. Any American interested in the ITU/WCIT governing the net debate should 
join the mailing list of State Department International Telecommunications 
Advisory Committee. Simply send an email to join 
[email protected] and you automatically have access to ITAC. 

     Until recently, I was typically the only person to speak up at meetings 
who wasn't government or with strong dorporate ties. But they've now decided to 
reach out, looking to make the "multi-stakeholder" model more democratic. 
Anyone with questions can email me offlist adn I'll point them in the right 
direction. 

    It's an opportunity to have influence beyond just the usual talk. db

http://fastnetnews.com/policy/177-p/4826-itu-secrecy-disappearing-as-us-itac-open-to-all
ITU Secrecy Disappearing as U.S. ITAC Open to All
Join me and make a difference. 303,000,000 Americans have just been offered 
access to the notoriously secret ITU WCIT documents. Just join ITAC, the State 
Department International Telecommunications Advisory Committee, and enjoy 
access. ?It takes a simple email to Mr. Julian Minard, with a request to be 
placed on the ITAC listserv, based on some material interest in a given topic,? 
Paul Najarian of State writes. Simply send an email to join 
[email protected] and you automatically have access to ITAC. 
That's actually proving true, and email me if you need details how to make this 
work for you. Until now, no one knew about it so almost no one applies except 
insiders. It?s really that simple. I?ve recommended three people and they were 
all treated respectfully.
  Uncle Sam wants you, as  Ambassador Terry Kramer makes clear below and 
confirmed to me in a brief phone call. ?We welcome all interested stakeholders 
to participate in our WCITpreparatory process and help the U.S. Government form 
positions in advance of the conference.  We solicit this input and feedback 
through the United States International Telecommunications Advisory Committee 
(ITAC).? His colleague, Ambassador Phil Verveer testified to Congress, that 
ITAC is ?open to all interested parties to review and advise on the regional 
and national contributions to WCIT as they are submitted.? 
    To my amazement, the discussions are substantive. With almost no one 
outside the system, it's become a convenient forum for State to share 
information with NTIA, FCC, and others, as well as two dozen or so corporate 
people who are on the inside. So it's actually a useful point to express your 
opinion. Being on ITAC gives you access to the main ITU and WCIT documents, 
along with a painful number of exceedingly boring emails. The meetings are in 
D.C. at State and generally have call-ins. 
    Until recently, I was the only person speaking at most meetings who wasn?t 
part ofgovernment or have strong corporate ties. No one else spoke up, for 
example, when U.S.proposals for NGN resembled a blueprint for the Great 
Firewall of China. (Our security agencies have similar requirements.)
     I wrote that the ITU wanted to open the documents 
http://fastnetnews.com/itu/186-i/4822-itu-qmembers-free-to-publish-any-documentsq-and-they-will-im-told
 based on ITU sources and some comments from Europe. I had no expectation the 
U.S. would join actively, but that?s exactly what Ambassador Kramer promises

?Recently, the ITU Council announced its decision to make public one of the 
summary documents of proposals to amend the International Telecommunications 
Regulations.  In addition, at the recent meeting in Geneva, the Secretary 
General stressed that ?all ITU members have full access to all WCIT-12 
documents and can share them within their constituencies.?

Accordingly, I want to take a moment to update you on the U.S. Government?s 
approach to stakeholder participation and input for the December conference and 
also my decision on how we will share and distribute WCIT documents going 
forward. 
First, we welcome all interested stakeholders to participate in our WCIT 
preparatory process and help the U.S. Government form positions in advance of 
the conference.  We solicit this input and feedback through the United States 
International Telecommunications Advisory Committee (ITAC).   I believe that 
the ITAC process is critically important in helping the U.S. Government convene 
the type of open, public, and necessary consultations from all stakeholders 
that helps strengthen our positions in advance of the WCIT.  The ITAC has 
advised the Department of State on U.S. participation in international 
telecommunications treaty organizations such as the International 
Telecommunication Union for decades and has, accordingly, been critical in the 
preparation of prior U.S. positions for meetings of international treaty 
organizations, developing and coordinating proposed contributions to 
international meetings and submitting them to the Department of State for 
consideration.  For t!
he WCIT, the ITAC will continue to serve this critical role.  Therefore, we 
welcome any person and any and all organizations, whether corporate or 
non-profit, to participate in the ITAC if they would like to assist with the 
WCIT preparatory process.
Second, all WCIT preparatory documents ? including revisions of the TD-62 
compilations of Member States proposals, the final report of the Council 
Working Group, and Member State proposals ? have been and will continue to be 
made available to interested ITAC member.   It is imperative that we ensure 
full consideration of a WCIT proposal?s impact on economic growth, the 
Internet?s openness, and the world at large and this is best done through the 
adoption of open and transparent processes that allow for wide consultation.  
Thus, we will continue to share these WCIT documents with stakeholder so that 
they can provide more informed views and help us develop positions that reflect 
the input of the diverse range of interests in the United States. 
Starting this week, I will proactively communicate our positions on 
participation and document availability to underscore the US Government?s 
commitment to
transparency. 
Terry D. Kramer
U.S. Ambassador
Head of U.S. Delegation? 

http://fastnetnews.com/policy/177-p/4827-state-department-actively-reaching-out-to-public-knowledge-a-others
 

State Department Actively Reaching Out To Public Knowledge & Others
Monday, 30 July 2012 12:51
Looking for civil society support at ITU. ?The USG did reach out to us and that 
is good,? Rashmi Rangnath of Public Knowledge emails. ?They are certainly 
interested in hearing what we have to say.? Another key D.C. public interest 
group confirmed to me State was reaching out to them as well. 
AT ITU and WCIT discussions, the U.S. "multi-stakeholder" model is just a 
veneer on corporate interests. A Verizon lobbyist sits on the board of ISOC, 
where?s he joined by a Comcast engineer; Comcast went to court to oppose even 
the very weak U.S. neutrality rules and led a massive lobbying campaign against 
neutrality. Another Verizon lobbyist is on the official U.S. delegation to 
WTPF. The U.S. ITAC until recently had dozens of corporate representatives and 
essentially no one from civil society.
Terry Kramer, the head of the U.S. delegation to WCIT comes from 
Vodafone/Verizon. The State Department lead, Ambassador Phil Verveer, is a 
former Verizon/AT&T/USTA lawyer, although Verveer is rumored to be a lame duck 
these days. His telco ties certainly didn't hurt his chances for the job. 
Probably more important was that he and his wife were friends since college 
with Bill and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton. 
       U.S. credibility requires incorporating people like Gigi Sohn of Public 
Knowledge, 


-- 
Editor, DSL Prime, Fast Net News and A Wireless Cloud
Author with Jennie Bourne  DSL (Wiley, 2002) and Web Video: Making It Great, 
Getting It Noticed (Peachpit, 2008)



----- End forwarded message -----

--Lauren--
Lauren Weinstein ([email protected]): http://www.vortex.com/lauren 
Co-Founder: People For Internet Responsibility: http://www.pfir.org/pfir-info
Founder:
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 - PRIVACY Forum: http://www.vortex.com/privacy-info
 - Data Wisdom Explorers League: http://www.dwel.org
 - Global Coalition for Transparent Internet Performance: http://www.gctip.org
Member: ACM Committee on Computers and Public Policy
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Tel: +1 (818) 225-2800 / Skype: vortex.com
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