Further to my message of 8 Dec 2003: Effectiveness of domain name service regulation in Australia ... , the following ACCC media release, at first glance, raises some interesting questions and opportunities for the Australian domain name services industry (however defined) and consumers/registrants. Ian Johnston -- Source: http://203.6.251.7/accc.internet/digest/view_media.cfm?RecordID=1090 ACCC to Endorse High Standard Voluntary Industry Codes of Conduct The Australian Competition and Consumer Commission will introduce a system of endorsement for high quality voluntary industry codes of conduct, ACCC Chairman, Mr Graeme Samuel, announced today. "This initiative has the potential to provide effective industry codes of conduct that deliver real benefits to businesses and consumers with the least possible compliance cost placed on either", Mr Samuel told the Australian Industry Group conference in Canberra. Such codes avoided "heavy handed" regulation by government. Self regulation was not always effective. Co-regulation was a suitable halfway measure. "Effective codes result in increased compliance and reduced regulatory costs", Mr Samuel said. "By providing endorsement, the ACCC can work with industry groups who approach us, to iron out any likely deficiencies in their code. The role of the Commission will be to assist industry groups in ensuring the success of your codes. "The industry will need to demonstrate that its code is achieving its objectives before the Commission will provide endorsement… But be aware, endorsement from the Commission will be hard to obtain and easy to lose". "ACCC endorsement should provide the consumer with some reassurance that the business they are dealing with operates in a fair, ethical and lawful manner. ACCC endorsement will provide the business operator with a degree of confidence that they are applying best industry practice". Mr Samuel warned that if the ACCC found a code was not achieving its objectives, it would recommend changes to ensure essential criteria were met. "If the industry fails to adopt these recommendations, the Commission will be free to remove any endorsements of the code. "Industry groups who receive our endorsement can advertise it but rest assured the ACCC will advertise removal of your endorsement if the industry group …fails to comply". Mr Samuel said that the ACCC recognised that some codes of conduct might contain anti-competitive elements. These provisions would need to obtain authorisation from the ACCC before the code could be considered for endorsement. Authorisation protects parties from action under the Trade Practices Act 1974 when the anti-competitive provisions or conduct generate greater offsetting public benefits. Criteria that would be considered before a code was endorsed include ensuring transparency of processes; independent complaints handling procedures; sanctions for non-compliance, monitoring; and performance indicators. Mr Samuel said the ACCC was currently involved with nearly 40 groups seeking to develop or review codes of conduct. Further details of the speech will be available from the ACCC website. <http://www.accc.gov.au/speeches/2003/australian_industry_group_110803.pdf> [116 kb] Further information Mr Graeme Samuel, Chairman, (02) 6243 1129 or mobile/pager 0408 335 555 Mr John Martin, Commissioner responsible for small business, (02) 6243 1130 Ms Lin Enright, Director, Public Relations, (02) 6243 1108 or 0414 613 520 MR 168/03Received on Fri Oct 03 2003 - 00:00:00 UTC
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