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ITU Council decisions summary

The ITU Council met between 11 and 21 October 2011 in Geneva. Its key decisions are outlined very briefly below.


Photo: ITU

The nine-day session reviewed 76 input documents, including 20 contributions from Member States. Twenty-seven formal texts were adopted. The most significant were:

  • The creation of the "Council Working group on International Internet-related Public Policy Issues." (previously a less formal 'dedicated group'). There was some controversy over the working group's approach and its member-state-only membership.
  • A decision to focus the 5th World Telecommunication Policy Forum in 2013 on the key Internet resolutions agreed at the 2010 Plenipotentiary (101, 102, and 133)

ITU Council edges slowly, painfully toward the Internet

The International Telecommunication Union (ITU) is continuing its difficult journey toward the 21st century in Geneva this week.

Picking up where the organization’s Plenipotentiary in Guadalajara a year ago left off, the ITU Council has been considering a number of proposals concerning the Internet and, not for the time, has hit the Internet’s culture of openness head on.

Following literally days of discussions spent trying to bridge the gap between a closed inter-governmental culture and the Internet’s open approach to policy, a series of odd compromises has been struck.

Key among them is future discussions of the “Dedicated Group on international Internet-related public policy issues”. The DGIRPPI (the worst acronym we’ve seen for a while) is transitioning to a more formal Working Group designation and is the hub of most of the work that emerges with respect to the Internet.

The ITU however finds itself stuck between two competing models and facing contradictory language over how to make that transition.

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