Title: The Telecommunications Industry Association TIA ADVANCING GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS
1The TelecommunicationsIndustryAssociation
(TIA)ADVANCING GLOBAL COMMUNICATIONS
2 Telecom Standards and Innovation
- The Role of Information and Communications
Technologies in Industrialization - Panel on the Role of ICT Standards
- October 22, 2008
- Beijing Hilton Hotel
- Beijing, Peoples Republic of China
- Nick Fetchko
- Director
- International and Government Affairs
- nfetchko_at_tiaonline.org
3 Presentation Overview
- TIA and its Standards Activities
- U.S. Standards Process
- International Standards Process
- Benefits of Voluntary Standards
- Technology Neutrality and Trade
4 TIA at a Glance
- TIA represents the global information and
communications technology (ICT) industry - Standards
- Domestic and International Policy
- Market Intelligence
- SUPERCOMM Tradeshow (8-11 June, 2009)
5About TIA
- Accredited Standards Development Organization
(SDO) by the American National Standards
Institute (ANSI) - Founding Partner and Secretariat for the Third
Generation Partnership Project 2 (3GPP2)
developing next generation of cdma2000 wireless
specifications (includes the Chinese
Communications Standards Association) - Sits on the International Telecommunication Union
(ITU) TELECOM Board of Directors - Hosts U.S.-Certified USA Pavilions at intl. trade
fairs - Founding organization of U.S Information
Technology Office (USITO) in Beijing - Secretariat for International Organization for
Standardization (ISO) Technical Committee 204 on
Intelligent Transport Systems
6A World-Recognized Authority
- TIA represents the global information and
communications technology (ICT) industry - TIA efforts benefit thousands of companies and
individuals - 1,100 experts and industry leaders involved in
committees - 70 engineering committees formulate positions
and prepare standards for industry and government - 1,500 standards currently available
- Active participant in Global Standards
Collaboration, an international initiative to
exchange work programs and other information in a
number of agreed high-interest technical areas
with the goal of promoting global standards in
areas of common interest.
7TIA Active Participant in Industry Governance
- Serves on American National Standards Institute
(ANSI) Board of Directors and numerous committees
and forums - Serves on International Electrotechnical
Commission (IEC) U.S. National Committee
Council and Technical Management Committee - Member of U.S. Electronic Component Certification
Board (ECCB) - Serves on Standards Engineering Society (SES)
Board of Directors - Serves on InterNational Committee for Information
Technology Standards (INCITS) Executive Board - Co-sponsor of Administrative Council for Terminal
Attachments (ACTA)
8TIA Standards
- Members participate in more than 70 committees
- Mobile and personal communications systems
- Fiber optics and cabling infrastructure
- Vehicular telematics
- Terrestrial mobile multimedia
- Healthcare ICT
- Structural Standards for Steel Antenna Towers
- and many more
9 What is a standard?
- A technical standard is an established voluntary
norm or requirement. It is usually a formal
document that establishes uniform engineering or
technical criteria, methods, processes and
practices. - In telecommunications, standards are generally
developed to promote interoperability among
competing technologies
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11 U.S. Standards Development Model
- Bottom up approach
- Voluntary
- Consensual
- Industry, Government and other stakeholder
involvement - Government mandates only if there is a clear
public policy need (e.g. public safety, but even
in this case there is collaboration with the
private sector - TIAs Project 25)
12 U.S. Standards Structure ANSI NIST
- American National Standards Institute (Est. 1918)
- Private, non-profit organization that administers
and coordinates U.S. voluntary standardization
and conformity assessment activities. - Oversees the creation, promulgation and use of
thousands of norms and guidelines that directly
impact businesses in nearly every sector,
including Telecommunications. - Represents/coordinates U.S. interests in intl.
standards bodies such as the ISO and IEC - National Institute for Standards and Technology
(Est. 1901) - Responsible for coordinating USG standards policy
- works closely with ANSI.
13 International Standards Organizations
- National Standard Setting Bodies (e.g. ANSI)
- Accredits Standard Development Organizations
(e.g. TIA) - Regional Standard Setting Bodies
- Asia PASC
- Americas CITEL
- Europe ETSI
- Africa ARSO
- Middle East AIDMO
- Global
- International Telecommunications Union (ITU)
- International Organization for Standards (ISO)
- International Electrotechnical Commission (IEC)
14International StandardsOrganizations Cont.
- ITU, ISO and IEC comprised of numerous technical
committees working on development of
international standards. - National Standard Setting Bodies of countries
either directly, or through their accredited
organizations, are represented at regional and/or
global standard setting organizations.
15 Benefits of Collaborative Approach to
Standards in Telecom Sector
- Technology neutral policies promote competition
and innovation. - BUT, Telecommunications technology generally
cannot operate independently of a network. - Participation in voluntary and consensus driven
standards setting bodies ensures a voice for
different technology innovators to both speak and
be heard while promoting interoperability between
technologies.
16TIA Standards Process
- Participating in TIA Standard Committees requires
limited up front fee (to cover administrative
expenses), full TIA membership is not required. - Participation in TIA Standard Committees is open
to global companies. - International companies participate, including
Chinese companies Huawei and ZTE. - Decisions are consensus based.
17 Treatment of Intellectual Property
- Respect and protection of Intellectual Property
is critical to spurring innovation. - Standard setting requires sharing of information
on technologies in order to achieve common
technical approach. - Technology protected by IPR must be made
available on a reasonable and non-discriminatory
basis to those that incorporate the standard into
a product.
18 Trade Implications of Different Standard
Setting Approaches
- U.S. standards setting process is driven from the
bottom up with multi-stakeholder involvement
(industry and government). - Where governments lead in industry standards
development, market forces are minimized and
distorted, hindering innovation. - Standard policies unilaterally pursued by
governments absent a multi-stakeholder voluntary
standards setting process can also create
significant barriers to trade. - While WTO TBT provides flexibility for developing
countries to enact policies that encourage
indigenous innovation or for national security
reasons, innovation not undertaken in cooperation
with international standard setting processes can
create barriers to trade.
19 Principle of Technology Neutrality
- Market vs. government driven technology
development - Government should refrain from dictating one
technology over another (e.g. CDMA vs. GSM) - Although governments can claim to be technology
neutral, licensing policies, national
standards/specifications and certification and
compliance policies/practices can act to
discourage the use or introduction of other
technologies
20 Technology Neutrality in U.S. Bilateral
Trade Agreements
- Principal of Technology Neutrality included in
Telecommunications chapters of U.S. bilateral
trade agreements - Ratified
- Australia, Bahrain, Chile, Singapore, Peru
- Pending
- Colombia, South Korea, Panama
21 Thank You.
- Contact
- Nick Fetchko
- Director
- TIA International and Government Affairs
- nfetchko_at_tiaonline.org