Voice over Internet Protocol (VoIP) will transform many aspects of
traditional telephony service including technology, the business models
and the regulatory constructs that govern such service. This
transformation is generating a host of technical, business, social and
policy problems. The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) could
attempt to mandate obligations or specific solutions to the policy
issues around VoIP, but is instead looking first to industry initiatives
focused on key functionality that users have come to expect of
telecommunications services. High among these desired functionalities is
access to emergency services that allow a user to summon fire, medical
or law enforcement agencies. Such services were traditionally required
(and subsequently implemented) through state and federal regulations.
Reproducing emergency services in the VoIP space has proven to be a
considerable task, if for no other reason then the wide and diverse
variety of VoIP implementations and implementers. Regardless of this
difficulty, emergency service capability is a critical social concern,
making it is particularly important for the industry to propose viable
solutions for promoting VoIP emergency services before regulators are
compelled to mandate a solution, an outcome that often suffers
compromises both through demands on expertise that may be better
represented in industry and through the mechanisms of political
influence and regulatory capture. While technical and business
communities have, in fact, made considerable progress in this area,
significant uncertainty and deployment problems still exist. The
question we ask is: can an industry based certification and labeling
process credibly address social and policy expectations regarding
emergency services and VoIP, thus avoiding the need for government
regulation at this critical time?1 We hypothesize that it can. To
establish this, we developed just such a model for VoIP emergency
service compliance through industry certification and device labeling.
The intent of this model is to support a wide range of emergency service
implementations while providing the user some validation that the
service will operate as anticipated. To do this we first examine
possible technical implementations for emergency services for VoIP.
Next, we summarize the theory of certification as self-regulation and
examine several relevant examples. Finally, we synthesize a specific
model for certification of VoIP emergency services. We believe that the
model we describe provides both short term and long-term opportunities.
In the short term, an industry driven effort to solve the important
current problem of emergency services in VoIP, if properly structured
and overseen as we suggest, should be both effective and efficient. In
the long term, such a process can serve as a model for the application
of self-regulation to social policy goals in telecommunications, an
attractive tool to have as telecommunications becomes increasingly
diverse and heterogeneous