Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-19 Thread Tony Finch
Bill Woodcock wo...@pch.net wrote:

 The main unfortunate outcome is that the ITU has managed to get Study
 Group 3 approved to try to figure out how to override peering agreements
 with government-imposed settlements.

Do you have any citations for that? I thought they had given up on trying
to interfere with Internet peering and settlement.

Tony.
-- 
f.anthony.n.finch  d...@dotat.at  http://dotat.at/
Forties, Cromarty: East, veering southeast, 4 or 5, occasionally 6 at first.
Rough, becoming slight or moderate. Showers, rain at first. Moderate or good,
occasionally poor at first.



Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-19 Thread Nick Hilliard
On 19/12/2012 14:25, Tony Finch wrote:
 Do you have any citations for that? I thought they had given up on trying
 to interfere with Internet peering and settlement.

http://www.itu.int/net/ITU-T/lists/questions.aspx?Group=03Period=15

ETNO is very keen on introducing sending-party-pays, and recently brought
out an opinion piece on their intentions to bring this idea forward at the ITU:

http://www.etno.eu/datas/itu-matters/etno-ip-interconnection.pdf

 ETNO has introduced its views in Contribution C 109 submitted to the
 last meeting of the ITU Council Working Group to prepare for 2012 WCIT.
 ETNO’s proposal concerns:
[...]
 ‐ the economic background, advocating for an adequate return on
 investment based, where appropriate, on the principle of sending party
 network pays;

The Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communications (i.e. the
representative body of all the EU national comms regulators) came out with
the following statement:

 http://berec.europa.eu/files/document_register_store/2012/11/BoR(12)120rev.1_BEREC_Statement_on_ITR_2012.11.14.pdf

... where they noted among other things:

ETNO’s proposed end-to-end SPNP approach to data transmission is totally
antagonistic to the decentralised efficient routing approach to data
transmission of the Internet.

It's pretty unusual to get language this strong from a regulatory body.

Nick





Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-19 Thread Tony Finch
Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org wrote:
 On 19/12/2012 14:25, Tony Finch wrote:
 
  Do you have any citations for that? I thought they had given up on trying
  to interfere with Internet peering and settlement.

 http://www.itu.int/net/ITU-T/lists/questions.aspx?Group=03Period=15

Looks vaguely ominous. Do they have a document which gives their
definition of international telecommunications services and NGNs?

Tony.
-- 
f.anthony.n.finch  d...@dotat.at  http://dotat.at/
Forties, Cromarty: East, veering southeast, 4 or 5, occasionally 6 at first.
Rough, becoming slight or moderate. Showers, rain at first. Moderate or good,
occasionally poor at first.



Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-19 Thread Nick Hilliard
On 19/12/2012 15:17, Tony Finch wrote:
 Nick Hilliard n...@foobar.org wrote:
 On 19/12/2012 14:25, Tony Finch wrote:

 Do you have any citations for that? I thought they had given up on trying
 to interfere with Internet peering and settlement.

 http://www.itu.int/net/ITU-T/lists/questions.aspx?Group=03Period=15
 
 Looks vaguely ominous. Do they have a document which gives their
 definition of international telecommunications services and NGNs?

dunno - they look intentionally vague to me.

Nick





Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-19 Thread Tom Taylor

You can look at the final outcome yourself (no password needed), at

http://www.itu.int/en/wcit-12/Documents/final-acts-wcit-12.pdf

RESOLUTION PLEN/5 on page 27 (by PDF count, out of 30 pages) describes 
work to be done by Study Group 3 and cooperating members. Note that the 
resolution is not part of the preceding treaty text.


On 19/12/2012 9:25 AM, Tony Finch wrote:

Bill Woodcock wo...@pch.net wrote:


The main unfortunate outcome is that the ITU has managed to get Study
Group 3 approved to try to figure out how to override peering agreements
with government-imposed settlements.


Do you have any citations for that? I thought they had given up on trying
to interfere with Internet peering and settlement.

Tony.





Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-16 Thread Doug Barton

On 12/14/2012 12:32 PM, Nick Hilliard wrote:

I don't forsee this debate dying any time soon.


What some of us have been saying since at least 2003 (if not earlier) is 
that it will _never_ die. Free speech, and the opportunities that an 
open Internet provide to the people who live in repressed regimes are 
the most dangerous things in the world to said regimes, and they will do 
everything in their power to eliminate them.


I'm certain that most of you have already noticed how cutting off the 
Internet is now on page 1 of every country's list of Things to do when 
there is an uprising ...


Doug



Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-16 Thread Phil Regnauld
On Sun, Dec 16, 2012 at 12:20:57PM -0800, Doug Barton wrote:
 
 I'm certain that most of you have already noticed how cutting off the 
 Internet is now on page 1 of every country's list of Things to do when 
 there is an uprising ...

In Egypt, this may actually have led to the opposite of what the regime
in place expected. Not the best source, but to illustrate:


http://content.usatoday.com/communities/technologylive/post/2011/01/egyptian-protestors-ditch-tech-use-word-of-mouth-to-mobilize/1

It was argued that because there was no access to the net, and no
other way to find out what was really going on, Egyptian citizens
got off their couches and down into the street, which in some
cases got some people to take sides and join the protests.

Case of damned if you do, and damned if you don't, as far as
censorship goes.

Phil



Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-16 Thread Doug Barton

On 12/16/2012 12:31 PM, Phil Regnauld wrote:

On Sun, Dec 16, 2012 at 12:20:57PM -0800, Doug Barton wrote:


I'm certain that most of you have already noticed how cutting off the
Internet is now on page 1 of every country's list of Things to do when
there is an uprising ...


In Egypt, this may actually have led to the opposite of what the regime
in place expected. Not the best source, but to illustrate:


http://content.usatoday.com/communities/technologylive/post/2011/01/egyptian-protestors-ditch-tech-use-word-of-mouth-to-mobilize/1

It was argued that because there was no access to the net, and no
other way to find out what was really going on, Egyptian citizens
got off their couches and down into the street, which in some
cases got some people to take sides and join the protests.

Case of damned if you do, and damned if you don't, as far as
censorship goes.


Or, Freedom routes around brokenness.  :)




btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Randy Bush



Re: btw, the itu imploded - NOT

2012-12-14 Thread bmanning

not at all...  the WCIT 2012 concluded without agreement.  Hardly the same
thing.

/bill



RE: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Warren Bailey
? Again? ;)


From my Galaxy Note II, please excuse any mistakes.


 Original message 
From: Randy Bush ra...@psg.com
Date: 12/14/2012 11:44 AM (GMT-08:00)
To: North American Network Operators' Group nanog@nanog.org
Subject: btw, the itu imploded






Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Mike A
On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 11:41:48AM -0800, Randy Bush wrote:
---end quoted text---

Yep. _Gloriously_! The US walked out, followed by bunchty others. 

http://www.pcworld.com/article/2020469/opponents-say-itu-treaty-threatens-internet-freedom.html

-- 
Mike Andrews, W5EGO
mi...@mikea.ath.cx
Tired old sysadmin 



Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Bill Woodcock

On Dec 14, 2012, at 11:51 AM, Mike A mi...@mikea.ath.cx wrote:
 
 Yep. _Gloriously_! The US walked out, followed by bunchty others. 
 
 http://www.pcworld.com/article/2020469/opponents-say-itu-treaty-threatens-internet-freedom.html

At current count, to the best of my incomplete knowledge, approximately 85 
countries, led by China, Saudi Arabia, Vietnam, and Cuba, have backed the ITU, 
while approximately 55 countries, led by the OECD countries, have backed the 
Internet.  Yes, this is a radical simplification.

The main unfortunate outcome is that the ITU has managed to get Study Group 3 
approved to try to figure out how to override peering agreements with 
government-imposed settlements.  Again, a radical simplification.  Happy to 
discuss in more detail if people like.  PP23 of 
http://files.wcitleaks.org/public/S12-WCIT12-C-0065!!MSW-E.pdf if you want to 
read it for yourself.

-Bill








Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Richard Barnes
See also: http://www.ipv.sx/wcit/


On Fri, Dec 14, 2012 at 2:41 PM, Randy Bush ra...@psg.com wrote:





Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Nick Hilliard
On 14/12/2012 19:51, Mike A wrote:
 Yep. _Gloriously_! The US walked out, followed by bunchty others. 
 
 http://www.pcworld.com/article/2020469/opponents-say-itu-treaty-threatens-internet-freedom.html

The ITU didn't implode and that article gives a ridiculously misleading
impression of what happened.  The BBC gives a more balanced viewpoint:

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/technology-20717774

There's some stuff up on some US news channels (ABC, etc), but some of the
larger players (CNN, NY Times + others) haven't actually woken up to the
extent of this tech/political landgrab, and have no recent articles on the
outcome or the political importance of it.

What actually happened is that the ITU ignored their previous promises not
to have a vote on the ITRs.  When a vote was finally called because it was
apparently that there was no general consensus on the articles, 77
countries voted in favour and 33 voted against, causing the treaty to start
the process of becoming legally binding in those countries which voted in
favour.

The current positions are here:

http://files.wcitleaks.org/public/S12-WCIT12-C-0066!!MSW-E.pdf
http://files.wcitleaks.org/public/S12-WCIT12-C-0067!!MSW-E.pdf

Many countries are formally sitting on the fence, including pretty much
every country in Europe which didn't walk out - also enjoy the spat in
declarations #4 (argentina) and #93 (UK).

Now that this landgrab has succeeded in large chunks of the world, the
ITU's position has consolidated, although not nearly to the extent that had
originally been envisaged in the draft ITRs.  I don't forsee this debate
dying any time soon.

Nick




Re: btw, the itu imploded

2012-12-14 Thread Gordon Lennox

WCIT-12 was but one exchange.

The next one is WTPF-13:

The World Telecommunication/Information and Communication Technology Policy 
Forum (WTPF) is a high-level international event to exchange views on the key 
policy issues arising from today's fast changing information and communication 
technology (ICT) environment. WTPF 2013 will take place in Geneva, Switzerland 
in May 2013.

Then there is Plenipotentiary in Busan, Republic of Korea from 20 October to 7 
November 2014.

The Plenipotentiary Conference is the key event at which ITU Member States 
decide on the future role of the organization, thereby determining the 
organization's ability to influence and affect the development of Information 
and Communication Technologies (ICTs) worldwide.
 
The Plenipotentiary Conference is the top policy-making body of the ITU.

The ITU is not going away that soon. The game goes on.

Gordon