A top US official warned today against a rise of "digital protectionism", which she said threatens access to information and ideas and can hurt economic growth.
Commerce Secretary Penny Pritzker, who addressed a gathering of global leaders on the digital economy, expressed concern about measures that restrict content, limit data flows or impose standards that keep out foreign competition.
"This 'digital protectionism' threatens access to the technologies and information that people want and need to succeed," Pritzker told a ministerial meeting in Mexico of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.
"We expect such policies from authoritarian regimes that want to isolate their people — not from nations that welcome the global exchange of ideas and commerce," she said.
In a phone interview after the speech, Pritzker told AFP that "when governments engage in digital protectionism they leave their populations and others disenfranchised and disconnected".
She added: "We're committed to the model of an open and free Internet and what we are seeing around the world is policies that threaten that."
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Pritzker declined to offer specific examples of countries adopting protectionist policies, but said in her speech she was concerned about "data localisation laws that constrict cross-border data flows; content controls that limit access to information; and onerous technical standards that keep foreign competitors out of new markets."
She told AFP that some of the measures are "well-intentioned" but have unintended consequences that restrict online access.
Pritzker said that the ministerial meeting, the first by the organisation of advanced economies on the topic in five years, should reaffirm the principles of an open Internet which is not controlled by governments or intergovernmental organisations.
She said that the US decision to privatise the technical administration of the Internet's domain name system, on track for this year, should boost confidence in the so-called "multistakeholder" model that steers clear of government regulation.
The plan will leave the nonprofit group that manages the system – the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers – as a self-governing entity with checks and balances that limit any single group or government from asserting control.
She said that Washington agreed to cede this "symbolic" role "to blunt the arguments of Russia and China and other authoritarian regimes that do not want to see a free and open Internet".