New framework for an open Internet agreed at OECD

OECD governments and other stakeholders have created a new framework to promote a more transparent, open Internet. The new principles, agreed by OECD member governments, business representatives and technical experts, aim to advance the debate on Internet governance:

  • Promote and protect the global free flow of information
  • Promote the open, distributed and interconnected nature of the Internet
  • Promote investment and competition in high speed networks and services
  • Promote and Enable the Cross-Border Delivery of Services
  • Encourage multi-stakeholder co-operation in policy development processes
  • Foster voluntarily developed codes of conduct
  • Develop capacities to bring publicly available, reliable data into the policy-making process
  • Ensure transparency, fair process, and accountability
  • Strengthen consistency and effectiveness in privacy protection at a global level
  • Maximize individual empowerment
  • Promote Creativity and Innovation
  • Limit Internet intermediary liability
  • Encourage co-operation to promote Internet security and
  • Give appropriate priority to enforcement efforts

They underline the benefits that today’s light-touch, flexible regulation has brought in driving innovation and economic growth. This model, which includes governments, business, civil society and the technical community in a so-called multi-stakeholder approach, has been key to the Internet’s rapid growth and impact. “The Internet has achieved global interconnection without the development of any international regulatory regime. The development of such a formal regulatory regime could risk undermining its growth,” according to the communiqué.


New framework for an open Internet agreed at OECD Communiqué on Principles for Internet Policy-Making (read the communiqué) Statement (Electronic Frontier Foundation) Statement (Consumers Union) High-level global conference wants ISPs to play copyright cop (ars technica) Statement (NTIA)