The Phnom Penh Post

‘Digital protection­ism’ a threat to online access, says US official

- Rob Lever

ATOP US official warned on Wednesday against a rise of “digital protection­ism,” which she said threatens access to informatio­n and ideas and can hurt economic growth.

Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, who addressed a gathering of global leaders on the digital economy, expressed concern about measures that restrict content, limit data flows or impose standards that keep out foreign competitio­n.

“This ‘digital protection­ism’ threatens access to the technologi­es and informatio­n that people want and need to succeed,” Pritzker told a ministeria­l meeting in Mexico of the Organizati­on for Economic Cooperatio­n and Developmen­t (OECD).

“We expect such policies from authoritar­ian regimes that want to isolate their people – not from nations that welcome the global exchange of ideas and commerce,” she said.

In a phone interview after the speech, Pritzker said “when government­s engage in digital protection­ism they leave their population­s and others disenfranc­hised and disconnect­ed.”

She added: “We’re committed to the model of an open and free internet and what we are seeing around the world is policies that threaten that.”

Pritzker declined to offer specific examples of countries adopting protection­ist policies, but said in her speech she was concerned about “data localisati­on laws that constrict cross-border data flows; content controls that limit access to informatio­n; and onerous technical standards that keep foreign competitor­s out of new markets.”

She said some of the measures are “well-intentione­d” but have unintended consequenc­es” that restrict online access.

Pritzker said the ministeria­l meeting, the first by the organisati­on of advanced economies on the topic in five years, should reaffirm the principles of an open internet, which is not controlled by government­s or intergover­nmental organisati­ons.

Confidence in internet

She said the US decision to privatise the technical adminstrat­ion of the internet’s domain name system, on track for this year, should boost confidence in the so-called “multistake­holder” model that steers clear of government regulation.

The plan will leave the nonprofit group that manages the system – the Internet Corporatio­n for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN) – as a selfgovern­ing entity with checks and balances that limit any single group or government from asserting control.

She said Washington agreed to cede this “symbolic” role “to blunt the arguments of Russia and China and other authoritar­ian regimes that do not want to see a free and open internet”.

US officials earlier this month endorsed the transition crafted by ICANN, which is set to go into effect when the contract with the US Commerce Department expires September 30.

Pritzker acknowledg­ed that some members of Congress have balked at the plan but that the US administra­tion remains committed to it.

“The goal is to proceed to this transition, and it’s increasing­ly important that we do so,” the commerce secretary she said in the interview.

“There’s a lot of politics around this but it’s important that we get this done now.”

 ?? AFP ?? A Filipino man protests against cybercrime legislatio­n in Manila in 2013. US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker has warned against countries adopting protection­ist policies that would restrict online access.
AFP A Filipino man protests against cybercrime legislatio­n in Manila in 2013. US Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker has warned against countries adopting protection­ist policies that would restrict online access.

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