[Sigiii-l] FW: [wsis-prep1] ITU To Propose Intl Cyberspace Treaty at WSIS

Ian Johnson (imsij) i.m.johnson at rgu.ac.uk
Mon Jan 6 07:24:02 EST 2003


-----Original Message-----
From: Robert Guerra [mailto:rguerra at privaterra.org]
Sent: 04 January 2003 15:47
To: wsis-prep1 at lists.cpsr.org
Subject: [wsis-prep1] ITU To Propose Intl Cyberspace Treaty at WSIS

ITU To Propose Intl Cyberspace Treaty At Information Summit
279 words
14 November 2002
Nikkei Report
English
(c) 2002 Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Inc. All Rights Reserved. TOKYO 
(Nikkei)--The International Telecommunications Union (ITU) will propose 
at the World Summit on the Information Society in December 2003 the 
creation of an international cyberspace treaty to set forth basic rules 
on Internet taxation, copyright protection and crime prevention, 
according to Secretary-General Yoshio Utsumi.

In an interview with The Nihon Keizai Shimbun, Utsumi said the ITU, a 
United Nations agency, believes that different rules among countries 
will hamper cross-border e-commerce and lead to more Internet crimes. 
The ITU announced a basic plan for the treaty at a preparatory meeting 
for the summit held in Europe in early November. It will seek 
cooperation from the Japanese government at a preparatory meeting in 
Asia in January. The union hopes to incorporate plans to sign the treaty 
in an actionprogram to be compiled at the world summit, which will be 
attended by heads of state. The treaty will cover taxation of 
international e-commerce; copyright protection for content; prevention 
of Internet crimes, such as cyberterrorism and release of offensive 
material; security measures such as prevention of illegal access and 
data tampering; and privacy protection. It will set forth uniform 
domestic and international guidelines to handle problems that occur. If 
countries have different rules, some countries will gain a commercial
advantage over others, fair competition will be hindered due to the 
spread of illegal products, and countries without rules could become a 
hotbed of crime, according to Utsumi. The ITU believes the international 
rules will be helpful for developing countries in Africa and Asia when 
they draw up their information technology policies.
The Nihon Keizai Shimbun Thursday morning edition)
1/20/02 DIARY - POLITICAL AND GENERAL
398 words
21 November 2002




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