Introduction Regulation is one of the most important interventions in the liberalized telecommunications market. As more and more participants enter the market and competition intensifies, more regulation is needed to achieve rationality. Regulation has many important elements, but in this article I will explain three elements: license and license, interconnection, and universal access \ service. Licensing and licensing and licensing are models that provide operators with licenses to provide services to specific jurisdictions.
The purpose of the law is to intensify competition in all telecommunications markets in line with public interests, convenience and necessity, and to promote an orderly transition from regulated markets to a highly competitive, deregulated telecommunications market .
The world telecommunications market is rapidly evolving and changing due to the combination of liberalization of technology development market and privatization of telecommunications carriers. A new model based on international competition emerges in the field of international trade in telecommunications. Future trends are influenced by government policy changes, from deregulation to measures regulating or re-regulating the growing private sector. The proportion of space that will enable large-scale mergers in the future will determine the future trends of the market and the impact it will have on consumers. But if the government and invisible hands themselves are proved to be the carriers of equilibrium between perfect competition and new monopoly, the problem still exists.
In December 2012, the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) convened the International Telecommunication Conference (WCIT - 12) and amended the ITU Treaty adopted in 1988, the International Telecommunications Regulation (ITR). In particular, agreement on whether the revised "International Telecommunication Regulations" should be applied to the Internet and its governance. ThisInsight analyzes the impact of these developments on WCIT - 12, the revised ITR, future Internet governance, and the role of international law in this governance.
Internet Governance and International Law: Controversies concerning amendment of International Telecommunications Rules