Communications, Space and Technology Commission (Saudi Arabia) explained

Agency Name:Communications, Space and Technology Commission
(CST)
Nativename:هيئة الاتصالات والفضاء والتقنية
Type:Government agency
Preceding1:Saudi Communications Commission
Headquarters:Riyadh, Saudi Arabia
Chief1 Name:Abdullah Alswaha
Chief1 Position:Chairman
Chief2 Name:Mohammed Al-Tamimi
Chief2 Position:Vice-chairman
Parent Agency:Ministry of Communications and Information Technology

The Communications, Space and Technology Commission (CST; Arabic: هيئة الاتصالات والفضاء والتقنية, Hai'at al-Ittisalat wa Tiqniyyat al-Ma`lumat) is the Saudi communications authority. It was first established under the name of Saudi Communications Commission in accordance with the decision of the Council of Ministers. The name was changed after the commission was assigned new tasks related to information technology. Since October 2006, CITC has been handling the DNS structure and filtering in Saudi Arabia in the place of KACST (King Abdulaziz City for Science and Technology).[1]

Censorship

See main article: article and Censorship in Saudi Arabia. The Communications, Space and Technology Commission is responsible for regulating the Internet and for hosting a firewall which blocks access to thousands of websites, mainly due to sexual and political content. Access to Megaupload has been intermittently blocked by the Internet authorities in Saudi Arabia.

ICT sector

CST] is responsible for regulating the ICT sector in Saudi Arabia. The Telecommunications Act, issued by Royal Decree in 2001, provide the legal framework for organizing this sector. This Act involves a number of objectives such as: Providing advanced and adequate telecommunication services with affordable prices, creating an appropriate atmosphere to encourage fair competition, using frequencies effectively, localization of telecommunication technology and managing recent advancements, clarity and transparency in procedures, equality and neutrality, protection of the public interest as well as the interest of users and investors.[2]

Postal services

Since the end of 2019, CITC became responsible for regulating the postal sector in Saudi Arabia. This involved studying the current market, improving regulatory environment and supporting service providers to enhance the quality of their services.[3]

New technology

In alignment with the Saudi Vision 2030 and the National transformation program 2020, CITC is keen on facilitating the growth and localization of the IT & Tech sector in Kingdom. By 2023, CITC aims to increase the IT and emerging Tech market size, by regulating and licensing these technologies, and driving global investment.[4]

Services

Board Membership

External links

Notes and References

  1. Communications, Space and Technology Commission, Saudi Arabia, Annual Report 2005 . Communications, Space and Technology Commission . 2007-01-22 . dead . https://web.archive.org/web/20070926210833/http://www.citc.gov.sa/NR/rdonlyres/5F77A781-6ECB-43FB-8F5E-1C46CE907BE4/0/AnnualReportEng.pdf . 2007-09-26.
  2. Web site: CITC to lower cap on termination rates for local mobile and fixed calls. 11 June 2020.
  3. Web site: Postal Sector laws.
  4. Web site: Saudi Telecom Regulator CITC Issues Competition for New MVNOs. 2023-08-12. https://web.archive.org/web/20220811183217/https://www.spa.gov.sa/viewstory.php?lang=en&newsid=2021577. live. 2022-08-11.