We hope that China will use this break in the negotiations to reexamine its approach to the negotiations to expand the ITA and focus on reducing its overly large list of sensitive products. If China is ready to move forward to conclude the expansion of the ITA this year then the ITA Expansion is achievable this year.
Cybersecurity
Overview
The TIA Cybersecurity Working Group advocates public policy positions related to the security of ICT equipment and services from a vendor perspective as it relates to critical infrastructure, supply chain and information sharing.
Mission
The mission of the Cybersecurity Working Group is to promote consensus-based positions to the Congress, the Administration, Federal Agencies, and other relevant governmental bodies with the following:
- Advocate public-private partnerships as effective vehicles for collaborating on current and emerging threats.
- Promote industry-driven best practices and global standards for the security of critical infrastructure.
- Promote voluntary private sector security standards as non-mandated means to secure the ICT supply chain.
- Support efforts of the U.S. government to provide more timely and detailed cyber intelligence to industry to help identify threats to protect private networks
- Support prioritization of cybersecurity funding for federal research efforts.
Recent Activity
For a list of recent Cybersecurity filings, please click here.
Facebook/Twitter Lists

As part of a large U.S. industry delegation representing a broad array of ICT manufacturers, TIA is in Geneva, Switzerland this week to cheer on the trade negotiators who are working hard to conclude the negotiations to expand the product coverage of the WTO’s Information Technology Agreement (ITA). The ITA remains one of the most commercially important WTO trade agreements – by eliminating tariffs on a broad range of ICT products, the ITA lowers the cost and improves access to these products, which are vital to the economic competitiveness of all economies around the world.
The Telecommunications Industry Association was in Geneva last week along with AdvaMed, the Consumer Electronics Association, the Entertainment Software Association, the Information Technology Industry Council, the Liquid Crystal Polymer Coalition, the Motion Picture Association of America, and the Semiconductor Industry Association. This coalition of high-tech companies represents a broad spectrum of manufacturers and service providers in the information and communication technology (ICT) sector.
Last week was a busy one at the World Trade Organization (WTO) in Geneva, Switzerland. The signs are very encouraging that the member countries of the WTO are back on track to move the WTO’s trade liberalization agenda forward – from the new International Services Agreement (ISA) to the ongoing negotiations to expand the existing WTO Information Technology Agreement (ITA).






