27 Min.

What is the ITU and why does it matter‪?‬ Inside Geneva

    • Politik

In this episode, host Imogen Foulkes explores the most important UN agency most of us have never heard of.
  
Malcolm Johnson, deputy secretary general, ITU: ‘Telephony, radio and tv broadcasting , satellite communications, the internet, they wouldn’t have developed.’
  
So what has the International Telecommunications Union ever done for us?
  
Fiona Alexander, IT expert: ‘If you’re a beneficiary of any modern day communications network, you have benefitted from something that the ITU has done.’
  
And why are Russia and the United States competing to lead it?
  
Simon Manley, UK ambassador to the UN in Geneva: ‘We want to see an internet that is open, that is peaceful, that is secure, that enables the sharing of knowledge, the sharing of ideas.’
  
Can different countries really unite around best standards for the internet? And can they work together to bridge the digital divide?
  
Fiona Alexander, IT expert: ‘Every member state has a different perspective on what’s appropriate and what’s not appropriate online.’
Please listen and subscribe to our science podcast -- the Swiss Connection. 
Get in touch!
Email us at insidegeneva@swissinfo.ch Twitter: @ImogenFoulkes and @swissinfo_en Thank you for listening! If you like what we do, please leave a review or subscribe to our newsletter.

In this episode, host Imogen Foulkes explores the most important UN agency most of us have never heard of.
  
Malcolm Johnson, deputy secretary general, ITU: ‘Telephony, radio and tv broadcasting , satellite communications, the internet, they wouldn’t have developed.’
  
So what has the International Telecommunications Union ever done for us?
  
Fiona Alexander, IT expert: ‘If you’re a beneficiary of any modern day communications network, you have benefitted from something that the ITU has done.’
  
And why are Russia and the United States competing to lead it?
  
Simon Manley, UK ambassador to the UN in Geneva: ‘We want to see an internet that is open, that is peaceful, that is secure, that enables the sharing of knowledge, the sharing of ideas.’
  
Can different countries really unite around best standards for the internet? And can they work together to bridge the digital divide?
  
Fiona Alexander, IT expert: ‘Every member state has a different perspective on what’s appropriate and what’s not appropriate online.’
Please listen and subscribe to our science podcast -- the Swiss Connection. 
Get in touch!
Email us at insidegeneva@swissinfo.ch Twitter: @ImogenFoulkes and @swissinfo_en Thank you for listening! If you like what we do, please leave a review or subscribe to our newsletter.

27 Min.