House to examine plan for United Nations to regulate the Internet

By Brendan Sasso
The-Hill

House lawmakers will consider an international proposal next week to give the United Nations more control over the Internet.

The proposal is backed by China, Russia, Brazil, India and other UN members, and would give the UN’s International Telecommunication Union (ITU) more control over the governance of the Internet.

It’s an unpopular idea with lawmakers on both sides of the aisle in Congress, and officials with the Obama administration have also criticized it.

“We’re quite concerned,” Larry Strickling, the head of the Commerce Department’s National Telecommunications and Information Administration, said in an interview with The Hill earlier this year.

He said the measure would expose the Internet to “top-down regulation where it’s really the governments that are at the table, but the rest of the stakeholders aren’t.”

At a hearing earlier this month, Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) also criticized the proposal. He said China and Russia are “not exactly bastions of Internet freedom.”

“Any place that bans certain terms from search should not be a leader in international Internet regulatory frameworks,” he said, adding that he will keep a close eye on the process. Yet the proposal could come up for a vote at a UN conference in Dubai in December.

Next week’s hearing is expected to bring more attention in the U.S. to the measure, which would give the UN more control over cybersecurity, data privacy, technical standards and the Web’s address system. It would also allow foreign government-owned Internet providers to charge extra for international traffic and allow for more price controls.

The House Energy and Commerce subcommittee on Communications and Technology will hold the hearing and hear testimony from Robert McDowell, a Republican commissioner on the Federal Communications Commission (FCC); David Gross, a former State Department official; and Sally Shipman Wentworth, the senior manager of public policy for the nonprofit Internet Society.

The Internet is currently governed under a “multi-stakeholder” approach that gives power to a host of nonprofits, rather than governments.

Read More Here

0 comments


Comments:

Add your comment

Nickname:
E-mail:
Website:
Comment:

Other articlesgo to homepage

77 percent of Americans strongly disapprove of Congress

77 percent of Americans strongly disapprove of Congress(0)

Nearly 80 percent of Americans say they believe Washington is causing “serious harm to the country,” shedding further light on the low approval ratings of the most recent US Congress and the widespread pessimism regarding the country’s future. The overwhelming majority of Democrats, Republicans and Independents all believe that Washington politicians are damaging the United

Banker-Owned Obama Considers Corporate Sponsorship for Second Inauguration

Banker-Owned Obama Considers Corporate Sponsorship for Second Inauguration(0)

Aaron Dykes Infowars.com President Obama is officially considering corporate sponsors to back his second inaugural ceremony, citing worries that his base of donors are tapped out after floating upwards of $1 billion for his re-election — and pondering openly, officially, accepting cash from the most notorious 1% of the 1% in order to pay for

Internal memos confirm OH SoS applied untested/uncertified software patches that could steal it for Mitt Romney

Internal memos confirm OH SoS applied untested/uncertified software patches that could steal it for Mitt Romney(0)

By Gerry Bello and Bob Fitrakis The Free Press has obtained internal memos from the senior staff of the Ohio Secretary of State’s office confirming the installation of untested and uncertified election tabulation software. Yesterday, the Free Press reported that “experimental” software patches were installed on ES&S voting machines in 39 Ohio counties. (see Will

See The Most Devastating, Compelling Election Ad Of 2012

See The Most Devastating, Compelling Election Ad Of 2012(0)

Chelsea Schilling / WND In what could be the most stunning video indictment of President Obama and his administration’s policies this election year, a YouTube video reveals the fallout of the “hope” and “change” Obama promised in 2008. YouTube user TheVisualEdge explained that he assembled the seven-minute video “to get people excited about the election.”

The Facts Behind Whether Hamilton Co. Ohio Voting Machines Can be Hacked

The Facts Behind Whether Hamilton Co. Ohio Voting Machines Can be Hacked(0)

Ben Swann Fox 19 With the 2012 election just 12 days away, all eyes are on Ohio. With the heightened attention of the buckeye state also come heightened concerns of election fraud. And in no place is that concern higher than in our own Hamilton County. Ben investigates the facts behind Hamilton county’s electronic voting

read more
Subscribe Via Email



Visitors Online:



Contacts and information

USAHM News has been censored twice before.. We provide citizens with alternative news that the MSM doesnt cover.. Dont become brainwashed by all the lies and propaganda! Join the fight against the NWO.. Contact us if you would like to become a writer for our website. Remember if you dont stand up for your rights, who will?

Social networks

Most popular categories

USAHITMAN.COM - (We do not believe in copyright, only in sharing information freely)