India’s proposal on International Telecommunications Regulations 
(ITRs), submitted last month to the International Telecommunications 
Union (ITU), the U.N. agency responsible for information and 
communication technologies, has drawn opposition from, and fears of 
content control among, civil society and the industry alike. 
Sunil
 Abraham, Executive Director, Centre for Internet Society, told The 
Hindu: “The Indian government’s position on the ITRs can be improved, 
particularly with regard to the proposed definitions, approach to cyber 
security, scope of regulation.” However, he said, “we are confident that
 the Indian position will protect consumer and citizen interest once the
 government implements changes based on inputs from all… stakeholders.” 
The
 National Association of Software and Services Companies (NASSCOM), 
which represents the $100-billion IT and BPO industry, has strong views 
against the Internet governance model of the Internet Corporation for 
Assigned Numbers and Names (ICANN), but favours self-regulation. Its 
president Som Mittal says: “NASSCOM does not favour oversight by an 
existing U.N. organisation like ITU. Internet and infrastructure have to
 be in the hands of expert organisations with proven experience.” 
NASSCOM has also expressed discomfort with the inclusion of “ICTs along 
with processing” in Section 21E of India’s proposal, since this would 
subject IT and BPO industries to inter-governmental regulation through 
the ITRs. 
The Cellular Operators Association of India (COAI), 
which represents India’s largest mobile operators with nearly 700 
million subscribers, has also opposed any role for ITU in the areas of 
international roaming and Internet governance, fearing a direct impact 
on domestic network architecture, costs and technology choices. COAI 
director-general Rajan Mathews said: “We are already regulated by the 
Department of Telecom (DoT) and the Telecom Regulatory Authority of 
India (TRAI). Placing the ITU’s jurisdiction over us — where we neither 
have voice nor recourse — is unacceptable.” The COAI’s position is 
consistent with the GSM Association (GSMA), the world’s largest 
association of mobile companies representing 800 operators spanning 220 
countries. The COAI further alleges that most of its inputs “have been 
rejected without reasons assigned or even a meeting.” It has lodged a 
protest with the DoT. 
The Internet Service Providers Association
 of India (ISPAI) has similarly protested against ITU’s jurisdiction 
over issues of Internet governance, architecture and cost. 
Subho
 Ray, president, Internet & Mobile Association of India (IAMAI), 
said: “We represent a vast majority of Internet companies but have not 
been consulted by the DoT. We are completely opposed to ITU’s 
jurisdiction in any area related to Internet policy.” 
The FICCI 
has also given detailed inputs on the dangers of allowing ITU’s 
jurisdiction, especially in areas of Internet policy and governance. It 
supports a bottom-up consultative and consensus-led multi-stakeholder 
approach, similar to the one propounded by Telecom Minister Kapil Sibal 
at the Internet Governance Forum, the world’s largest multi-stakeholder 
conference, held in Baku. 
Several prominent civil society groups
 and members of academia involved in Internet governance also have 
apprehensions about expanding the ITU’s reach to Internet regulation 
through the ITRs. In a November 15, 2012 letter to Telecom Secretary R. 
Chandrashekhar, Society for Knowledge Commons, Internet Democracy 
Project, Free Software Movement of India, Delhi Science Forum, Media for
 Change and Software Freedom Law Center have complained about not having
 been consulted, while warning that India’s proposal “could have far 
reaching implications for the Internet.” 
On the issue of cyber 
security, industry associations and several civil society groups are 
unanimously against any role for ITU, pointing out that including 
ill-defined terms such as ‘spam’ and ‘network fraud’ in a binding treaty
 is a terrible idea. Further,A stone mosaic
 stands at the spot of assasination of the late Indian prime minister. 
cyber security commitments can force India to cooperate with countries 
whose military and strategic interests are against it. 
Kamlesh Bajaj, CEO, Data Security Council of India,We specialize in howo concrete mixer,
 and head of NASSCOM’s security initiatives, said: “Cyber security is 
sought to be taken over by ITU — an area in which it has little 
experience. Cyber security includes areas of application security, 
identity and access management, web security, content filtering, cyber 
forensics, data security, including issues such as cyber espionage and 
cyber warfare. The ITU has had no involvement in these matters over the 
last two decades, and should therefore stay out of them.” 
Similar
 views have been expressed in varying degrees by the COAI, the IAMAI, 
the ISPAI and the FICCI. Dr. Ray of the IAMAI says: “cyber security is 
essentially a state prerogative and should not be part of an external 
treaty obligation. Any attempt to channel it through the ITU may be 
counter productive.” 
Mr.An indoor positioning
 system (IPS) is a term used for a network of devices used to wirelessly
 locate objects or people inside a building. Sibal, who has already been
 challenged by opposition to the domestic IT rules, is aware that if 
left unaddressed,Directory ofchina glass mosaic
 Tile Manufacturers, opposition to India’s stance on ITRs will only 
escalate at a national and global level, and that if corrections have to
 be made in India’s position, those will have to be done consensually 
within the governance structure. Mr. Sibal confirmed that while cyber 
security was an area of discussion with the ITU,Find a great buy mosaic Art deals on eBay! “the ITU does not have any role in Internet governance.” 
According
 to him, either he or the Department will hold meetings on these issues 
with the industry to further evolve India’s position. 
Mr. 
Chandrashekhar further confirmed that similar to several global national
 delegations, the government would include media and industry experts as
 part of its delegation to Dubai, the World Conference on International 
Telecommunications (WCIT-12) will be held from December 3 to 14. The 
final decisions on the ITRs and the composition of the delegation would 
be announced the coming week. 
A deeply divided house in Dubai is
 a strong possibility, with countries which favour democracy and free 
speech taking a stance against those who, due to political compulsions, 
have proposed inter-governmental control through the ITRs by the ITU, 
not just on Internet policy, but also its traffic and content, most of 
which automatically fall under the definitions of the ICTs. 
The 
193-countries at THE WCIT may well spend 11 days discussing national 
proposals to separate issues that can be addressed nationally from those
 which require inter-governmental cooperation, while further debating 
which platforms may be best to address global cooperation. 
It is
 equally clear that the existing Internet governance system is 
unacceptable to most countries, and therefore a more evolved democratic 
and internationally equitable system, which is managed through a 
multi-stakeholder process and yet with a definite role for countries 
like India, appears the only way forward. 
Mr. Sibal, at meetings
 with global Internet governance bodies in Baku, is learnt to have 
bargained hard for India’s explicit role in the existing Internet 
governance processes.
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