"We need to avoid suffocating ... the Internet space through well-meaning but overly-proscriptive proposals that would seek to control content or seek to mandate routing and payment practices," Kramer said.
Though open to cooperating with other nations to make small changes, Kramer said he would oppose any large changes to how the Internet is regulated. Perhaps for this reason, issues of cybersecurity should be left off the table, he said.
"There are a lot of cyber threats but the nature of cyber issues requires agility, it requires a technical expertise, and it requires a distributed effort, so we are very sensitive about any one organization taking on the sole role of solving cyber threats," Kramer said. However, the conference is "not an appropriate or useful venue to address cyber security.”
In short, Kramer said he aims to keep things as they are and will oppose those making too many changes. Putting controls on the Internet, he said, is a “worrisome philosophical trend.”