[Asterisk-Users] Fwd: regulating voip - aca

Duane digium at aus-biz.com
Sun May 23 17:08:08 MST 2004


The Australian Government must be feeling left out and want to stick 
their noses in...

...

ACA moves to regulate VoIP
Rodney Gedda , Computerworld
20/05/2004 10:07:07
Mid-2005 will herald a new era in voice over IP telecommunications when 
the Australian Communications Authority (ACA) introduces specific 
regulations for service providers and enterprises stipulating how the 
technology must be delivered.

The ACA’s acting chairman Dr Bob Horton said VoIP regulation is 
“inevitable”.
“VoIP is novel and needs to be treated with flexibility for a while as 
we are faced with an innovative approach to telecommunications and want 
to make sure we don’t stifle innovation,” Horton told Computerworld.

“We need to test the boundaries of existing regulation and then fashion 
something around VoIP. Regulation is inevitable because whoever is 
carrying it has obligations for data, voice, or whatever and there needs 
to be a requirement for universal service.”

Horton said a discussion paper covering the regulation of VoIP will be 
put down as early as December this year when the ACA will allow “a 
couple of months” for all parties to ponder its implications.

“We will then draw a set of regulatory conditions from that,” he said. 
“Around February 2005 the recommendations will be put to the industry 
and the complete regulation guidelines should be finalised by July next 
year.”

Horton is also adamant that VoIP regulation will not be an impediment to 
the “due diligence process” already in place between the ACA and industry.

“There is a period of tolerance because we’d like to see 
experimentation,” he said. “And the ACA thanks the early entrants.

"There is an atmosphere of industry self-regulation so we’re giving them 
as much flexibility as possible.”
As to the type of conditions VoIP regulations might impose upon service 
providers, Horton said the three areas of quality of service, call 
location, and privacy will be considered, along with existing carrier 
guidelines such as what will happen in the event of a power blackout and 
how access will be provided for people with disabilities.

“One concern would be to give customers an understanding of what they 
are buying,” he said. “Many VoIP service providers are positioning 
[their products] as a telephone replacement so if there is any 
difference – let them know! VoIP has distinguishing characteristics, for 
example it’s transportable, so for emergency calls you wouldn’t know 
where it’s coming from.”

Furthermore, Horton said if VoIP calls are made to non-VoIP phones the 
regulations may need to stipulate a new number range so end users “can 
expect a low quality of service” which will be part of the consideration 
in December.

Regulations for enterprises running VoIP over their internal networks, 
Horton said are difficult to predict. "It’s like a private network and 
that’s not something new but if you have a transmission link you have to 
become a carrier.”

He also stressed that in addition to forthcoming regulations, rogue VoIP 
operations will not be tolerated.
“The industry would detect odd players and we would move to close them 
down,” he said. “VoIP will spur a number of new carriers as some 700 
[data] service providers are poised to offer voice.”

Individual calls are unlikely to be charged or taxed separately, Horton 
said, as regulations do not allow for this in keeping with the 
government’s stance on equal access.

-- 
Best regards,
  Duane

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