ITU at the heart of international Geneva ITU: Empowering global ICT development Malcolm Johnson, Director ITU Telecommunication Standardization Bureau South African Telecommunications Networks and Applications Conference 8 September 2008 International Telecommunication Union.

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Transcript ITU at the heart of international Geneva ITU: Empowering global ICT development Malcolm Johnson, Director ITU Telecommunication Standardization Bureau South African Telecommunications Networks and Applications Conference 8 September 2008 International Telecommunication Union.

ITU at the heart of
international Geneva
ITU:
Empowering global
ICT development
Malcolm Johnson, Director
ITU Telecommunication
Standardization Bureau
South African
Telecommunications Networks
and Applications Conference
8 September 2008
International
Telecommunication
Union
This is the world thanks to ITU
International
Telecommunication
Union
Outline
ITU Characteristics
Structure
Work highlights
Cooperation with other bodies
Academia and research institutes
World Telecommunication Standardisation Assembly
Global Standardisation Symposium
International
Telecommunication
Union
Introduction to ITU
World’s oldest international organisation
Founded in 1865 to ensure interoperability
of international telecommunications
Recognised as one of the world’s ten most enduring
institutions: defined as “institutions that have changed
and grown in unswerving success and relevance — yet
remained true through time to their founding principles”
Unique international public/private partnership
of 191 governments and over 700 private sector entities
HQ Geneva, 11 regional offices, 760 staff, over 80
nationalities
ITU Mission is to connect the world
Connect Africa Summit, Rwanda, October 2007
committed $50 billion to projects in Africa
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU Structure
General Secretariat: Coordinates activities and manages the
administrative and financial aspects of the Union’s activities
Radio Sector: Coordinates radiocommunications, radiofrequency spectrum management and wireless services:
Custodian of Radio Regulations – international treaty on use of
the radio spectrum and geostationary satellite orbit. Updated
every 4 years.
Development Sector: Technical assistance for deployment of
telecom networks, regulations and services in developing and
least developed countries to develop national
telecommunication/ICT services
Telecommunication Standards Sector (ITU-T): Adopts global
standards (ITU-T Recommendations) covering all fields of
telecommunications/ICTs. Custodian of international
telecommunications numbering schemes. Reviewing the
International Telecommunication Regulations (ITRs) –
international treaty on telecommunications operations.
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU-T Characteristics
Contribution driven – membership initiates, develops and
agrees output
Standards (over 3000) produced in “Study Groups”
Initial development in “Focus Groups” open to non-members
Meetings, Workshops and Tutorials held around the world
One of only three truly international standards bodies
Consensus based (but voting possible)
Very flexible, fast and transparent procedures
start work: 1 day / few weeks
develop work: weeks to 2-3 yrs
approve work: average 9 weeks
publish work: couple of days after approval
Common IPR Policy with ISO and IEC
International
Telecommunication
Union
Academia
Workshops
Media
Kaleidoscope
Website
Guidelines
Technology
Watch
International
Telecommunication
Union
Top Participants
= 79% of total
admin attendance
76%
Administrations
(841/1067)
69%
ROA
(328/432)
49%
SIOs
(700/1016)
Associates
(42/86)
China
153
Orange/France Telecom
60
NTT *
129
HHI
6
Korea
153
BT
47
Huawei
123
Dilithium
5
United States
132
KDDI
36
ETRI
90
OFS Fitel
4
United Kingdom
68
China Telecoms.
35
Nortel Networks *
53
Semtech
4
Syria
62
Telekom.Polska
26
Nokia Siemens *
48
UpZide
4
Japan
49
Deutsche Telekom
20
Alcatel *
47
AULM
3
France
44
Telecom Italia
18
Lucent *
47
RAD Data
3
Russia
44
AT&T
17
ZTE
45
Yokogawa
3
Canada
40
China Mobile Com.
16
Cisco
33
Anagran
2
Germany
35
Swisscom
16
L.M. Ericsson
23
ASSIA
2
Australia
25
NHK
13
NEC
21
Atos Origin
2
Switzerland
20
Telenor ASA
13
Telcordia
21
Essex
2
Kenya
16
KT Corp.
11
Hitachi
20
Finisar
2
Number of visits
* Consolidated for various memberships
Sector Members
Associates
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU-T hot topics
World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) follow up
Next generation network (NGN)
IPTV
Cybersecurity including identity management (IdM)
Ubiquitous networks
Next generation multimedia conferencing
Videocoding
Broadband access
Packet based transport
Fibre optics
Home networking
ICTs and climate change
Accessibility to ICTs for persons with disabilities
International
Telecommunication
Union
Some Historical Standards
2005:
2004:
2002:
2000:
1999:
1998:
1998:
1996:
1993:
1988:
1988:
1976:
1968:
VDSL2
Gigabit passive optical network (GPON)
H.264/MPEG-4/AVC video codec
X.509 for public key infrastructure (PKI)
Standards for cable modems
V.90 internet modem standard
SDH – key standard for digital information
H.323 for VoIP and videoconferencing
First DSL standards for broadband
Key audio coding standards (G.711 and G.72x)
1981: Signaling system seven (SS7) standards
First packet switching standard (X.25)
First standards for fax transmission
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU’s Emmy
awarded 23 August 2008
for ITU-T H.264/MPEG4 High Profile
International
Telecommunication
Union
Highlights of current activities
Climate Change
Power saving checklist for standards development
Symposia on ICTs and Climate Change, Kyoto, London.
Focus Group to determine impact of ICTs
IGF Dynamic Coalition on climate change
Accessibility for disabled people
Checklist for standards development
Workshops
IGF Dynamic Coalition on Accessibility and Disability
Emergency Telecoms
Language independent prefix for emergency numbers
Universal Child helpline
Cybersecurity
Security standards roadmap available of ITU website
Guidelines on spyware; toolbox of technical measures to
counter spam.
Identity management: entity authentication ,
requirements
Bridging the standardization gap
International
Telecommunication
Union
Bridging the standardization gap
Objective
End disparities in the ability of representatives of
developing countries, relative to representatives of
developed countries, to access, implement, contribute
to and influence international ICT standards,
specifically ITU Recommendations
Status
Much has been done to improve access:
Free access to ITU-T Recommendations
Regional Forums
Regional Groups
Remote collaboration tools
Meetings in the regions
Workshops and Tutorials
Expected Results
Developing countries requirements taken into account
Quicker implementation of new technology in developing
countries
International
Telecommunication
Union
Free ITU-T Recommendations
From the beginning of 2007, ITU-T Recommendations are
available for downloading free of charge
With only a small number of exceptions all
in-force ITU-T Recommendations are available in PDF form
with a click of the mouse
Over 3 million copies downloaded in last 12 months
www.itu.int/ITU-T/publications/recs.html
International
Telecommunication
Union
September 2008 workshops
IPv6: Geneva, 4-5 September
From Speech to audio: bandwidth extension, binaural
perception: Lannion, 10-12 September
ITU Regional Development Forum 2008: Bridging the
ICT standardization gap in developing countries for the
Asia-Pacific Region: Hanoi, 15-17 September
Advancing public-private partnerships for e-business
standards: Geneva, 18-19 September
WSC - Standardization Community Management Course:
Geneva 22-26 September
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU and Academia:
Kaleidoscope Events
To increase dialogue between academia and ITU
Aim to identify new topics for standardization
Organized with IEEE ComSoc as Technical Co-Sponsor and
supported by Cisco, Intel, the International Communications
Foundation of Japan and Sun Microsystems
Innovations in NGN, Geneva, 12-13 May 2008:
220 participants
Over 140 papers peer reviewed: 53 papers were presented
The best three were awarded prizes totaling $10,000 kindly
donated by Cisco.
Included in special edition of the IEEE Communications
Magazine
16 entrants received a Young Author Recognition Certificate
SATNAC winner one of best papers: Rolen Christian
International
Telecommunication
Union
Kaleidoscope 2009
Innovations for Digital Inclusion
Argentina, 31 August - 1 September 2009
Prize fund for best papers contributed by Cisco
Proceedings published in IEEE
Communications magazine
Call for papers now available on ITU website
International
Telecommunication
Union
Technology Watch
Technology Watch surveys the ICT environment for new
study topics – opportunity for academia and research
institutes to contribute
Technology Watch Briefing Reports provide an up-todate assessment of promising new technologies
Recent papers available on ITU website:
Remote collaboration tools
Ubiquitous Sensor Networks
ICTs and Climate Change
Telepresence
High-performance video-conferencing
Intelligent Transport Systems
Lawful interception (LI)
Under study: ICTs and food security
International
Telecommunication
Union
Strong NGN Focus
Provide global leadership through providing overall
framework and structure
Bring the benefits of NGN to the attention of the
developing countries
Provide advice and assistance in developing the
necessary human capacity requirement to take
advantage of the opportunities that are on the
horizon
Influence the application and regulatory challenges
ahead
Build on the work of other bodies (TISPAN, 3GPP)
International
Telecommunication
Union
NGN-GSI
GSI = Global Standards Initiative
Developing the standards necessary for NGN deployment
These relate to network architectures, interface specifications,
and implementation guidelines
NGN-GSI harmonizes, in collaboration with other bodies,
different approaches to NGN architecture worldwide.
22 Recommendations on NGN
Transition from legacy networks, service requirements,
network architecture, security, QoS, etc.
International
Telecommunication
Union
World Standards Cooperation
(WSC)
Members: ITU, ISO and IEC
Leadership meets regularly to coordinate work
Joint activities: e.g. Joint Video Team
Common IPR policy
… strongly encourages the disclosure of known patented technology
from the outset.
Allows for companies’ IPR to be included in standards as long as it is
made available under reasonable and non-discriminatory terms and
conditions.
WSC also adopted Guidelines for the Implementation of the
Common Patent Policy and a Patent Statement and License
Declaration Form, and online patent database.
International
Telecommunication
Union
Global Standards Collaboration
(GSC)
Members: ITU and leading regional standards
development organisations
The mandate of GSC is to provide a venue to:
Exchange information on the progress of standards
development
Collaborate in planning future standards
development to gain synergy and to reduce
duplication.
Support the ITU as the preeminent global
telecommunication and radiocommunication
standards development organization.
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU-T and 3GPP
Since 2007 ITU-T participates at 3GPP PCG/OP
and PCG meetings
Iterative process agreed:
ITU-T submits requirements on common
IMS to 3GPP
3GPP specifications on common IMS
submitted to ITU-T for comment
Objective is adoption of 3GPP specifications as
ITU Recommendations
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU-T and IEEE
Mutual promotion of events of common interest was agreed
in February 2007
ITU-T participates in IEEE-SA Corporate Advisory Group
(CAG)
Joint sponsorship of Kaleidoscope Events
ITU hosting of IEEE meetings: IEEE 802.1 and 802.3
Joint ITU-T/IEEE Workshops: e.g. on Carrier-class Ethernet
IEEE 802 participates in ITU-T SG15
International
Telecommunication
Union
ITU-T and IETF
Regular ITU-T / IETF Leadership Gatherings
Joint group on MPLS
International
Telecommunication
Union
World Telecommunication
Standardization Assembly
Johannesburg
21-30 October 2008
Emperors Palace Convention Centre
Hosted by Government of South Africa
Will be opened by Dr Ivy Matsepe-Casaburri, Minister of
Communications, South Africa
Chaired by Ms Lyndall Shope-Mafole, Director-General, Ministry of
Communications, South Africa
Participation from governments, regulators, industry and
observers from around the world, sponsored students encouraged
Over 700 participants expected
Will include exhibition of telecoms/ICT industry in South Africa
Preceded by Global Standards Symposium
International
Telecommunication
Union
World Telecommunication
Standardization Assembly
objectives
WTSA sets direction and structure
Decides on future standardization priorities
Ensure relevant, clear mandates avoiding duplication
Appoints chairmen and vice-chairmen
Proposals for:
Reduced membership fee for academia and
developing country companies
To facilitate greater participation, especially of
developing countries
Introduction of ITU Mark: interoperability testing
To standardise new services and applications
International
Telecommunication
Union
Global Standards Symposium
Johannesburg, 20 October 2008
Open to any interested party, free of charge
High level speakers from industry, government, regulators
and standards development bodies
Themes:
Reducing the standardization gap
Proliferation of standardisation forums and bodies
Improving collaboration
Climate change
Accessibility
Will produce report to WTSA
Registration now open on ITU website
International
Telecommunication
Union
Come and join us
Chance to network with experts and policy makers from
around the world
Influence the development of global standards and
services
Open to new initiatives – can set up new interest groups
very quickly
Produces results fast
Cost of participation is low – and lowering
Opportunity for fulfilling corporate social responsibility
Membership application details on ITU website
International
Telecommunication
Union
Thank you for your attention
[email protected]
www.itu.int
International
Telecommunication
Union