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To: Jon Koplik who wrote (16314)10/11/1998 11:17:00 PM
From: Ruffian  Respond to of 152472
 
Jon>All, This might have good implications;



U.N. body to consider global telecommunications policies
Associated Press

U.N. body to consider global telecommunications policies AP Business
Writer

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) -- Delegates from nearly 200 countries will spend a
month here, helping shape the future of international Internet access and
telephone calls.

The International Telecommunication Union, a Geneva-based U.N. agency,
is holding the four weeks of talks that could set the tone for communications
regulation and policy-making around the world.

Vice President Al Gore, who has encouraged countries to develop their own
advanced telecommunications systems as a way to spur economic growth, is
to address the opening session of the ITU's 15th Plenipotentiary Conference
Monday afternoon.

The 1,600 delegates are likely to discuss whether Internet information will
continue to flow cost-free across national borders, whether countries may
limit Internet access and whether there should be uniform charges for
international telephone calls.

The participants will set the conference agenda. Although discussions could
lead to future policy changes, no policy votes are expected at the
conference, which continues through Nov. 6.

Debate is expected on several policy issues, including:

--The ITU's regulatory role, if any, over the Internet. The ITU now largely
deals with technical issues rather than issues of content and pricing.

--Whether the ITU should settle disputes among international phone
companies over the rates they pay one another to end calls in each other's
countries. Carriers now resolve their own disputes or take issues to their
governments for resolution.

--Whether the ITU should develop a single standard or multiple standards
so wireless communications systems can communicate in more than one
country and with one another.

"The most important thing to have when people leave Minneapolis is
knowing that the ITU has a good strategic plan for the future. If not, the ITU
could become irrelevant as countries move to a more competitive era," said
Bill Kennard, chairman of the Federal Communications Commission.

The United States generally supports competitive telecommunications
policies which, in theory, would mean lower prices for consumers
worldwide for phone, paging, messaging and other communications services.

Kennard also said he wants private companies to become more involved
with the ITU, providing input on everything from setting worldwide technical
standards for communications equipment to making more efficient use of the
public airwaves.

"It is an extraordinary event. You're going to have the senior people from
every government in the world in Minneapolis," said Scott Blake Harris, a
former FCC executive and global telecommunications expert.

"A lot of what takes place is not just the hard decisions. The vice president's
opening speech can set the tone for the entire gathering," Harris said.

"If delegates walk out of that meeting thinking private investment,
competition, open markets, that is as likely to be as important as any
individual decision" made by delegates later, he said.

Publication Date: October 11, 1998
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To: Jon Koplik who wrote (16314)10/11/1998 11:17:00 PM
From: Dave  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 152472
 
off topic

Jon:

do you follow the futures? could you post the link to the globex prices...

thanks in advance,

dave