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GSC Global Standards Collaboration GSC-10 28 August – 2 September 2005 Sophia Antipolis, France August 28 – September 2, 2005 1 ISACC Opening Plenary Presentation to GSC-10 Agenda Item: 4.5
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20052 ISACC Formerly known as Telecommunications Standards Advisory Council of Canada, TSACC To reflect global convergence, we have changed our name in 2004 to the ICT Standards Advisory Council of Canada www.isacc.ca
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3 IETF National International GSC Partnership is key to success
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20054 Structure ISACC accomplishes its work in three ways semi-annual plenary sessions Topical presentations are made on ICT standards issues, discussions are held on the progress of task groups and rapporteurs special task groups Formed as needed to develop Canadian views on international ICT standards that may contain regulatory, legal, security and policy aspects Rapporteurs Rapporteurs have been assigned to monitor areas of high interest
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20055 Current Rapporteurs E-commerce Security ENUM Intellectual Property Rights SPAM ICANN
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20056 Major Focuses Since the last GSC-9 meeting in Korea, our focus has been on: NGN Security Internet Governance SPAM
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20057 NGN Challenges and future impact of NGN Independence of service-related functions from underlying transport technologies Data network providers, traditional wireline and wireless carriers are converging and able to offer equivalent forms of NGN access and services. Industry Canada is undergoing a Telecom Policy Review to deal with impact of convergence Federal Regulator (CRTC) issued statement that VoIP is a regulated service for incumbent carriers Convergence between Wireline and Wireless Support for mobility Common IMS Network enables integrated services Service Enabled Multimedia VoIP Unrestricted access by users to different services and/or service providers Security Important to provide a robust and secured telecom infrastructure
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20058 Security Fall 2004 ISACC Plenary focused on security Cyber-crime New threats constantly emerge Issues surround legal enforcement and getting a conviction The foundation of any secure deployment of any application is a secure underlying infrastructure IP Telecom Cyber Security Program (Industry Canada) Objective: Ensure critical telecom infrastructure protection Investigation and Analysis –Investigate and analyze impact of vulnerability incidence reports Verification –Verify identified vulnerabilities Discover –Identify potential vulnerabilities in telecom network architectures and protocols
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 20059 Security (cont.) IP Telecom Cyber Security Program (Industry Canada) Protocol Analysis Lab Funded security research with three Canadian universities –Encourage and promote research interests in network security amongst Canadian academia –VOIP, Wireless etc Collaboration with industry Findings assist in guiding security policy and standards work
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 200510 New Wireless Technology and Services Ultra-wideband Broadband over power lines WiMax Wi-Fi Public Safety spectrum 700 MHz and 4.9 GHz New spectrum access techniques
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 200511 Internet Governance ISACC has begun to examine Global Governance issues such as Cyber-Crime SPAM Ensuring that everyone is represented Focus is consistent with the core mandate of the ITU-T Encourages the development of a predictable and secure Internet Impact of new technology
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GSC August 28 – September 2, 200512 Task Force on SPAM ISACC participated in the Federal Task Force on SPAM. Keys areas included: Email Certification Principles and Methodologies Commercial Email Validation Final report submitted to the Minister of Industry Next Steps are being Evaluated
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