Showing posts with label Airtel Zero. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Airtel Zero. Show all posts

Sunday, December 27, 2015

Trai aims to resolve some neutrality issues by early 2016



As the debate over net neutrality resurfaces, telecom regulator Trai has said that it is looking to solve the issues "part-by-part" and also aiming to come up with the final guidelines based on the views received from different stakeholders, by early 2016. "We expect to resolve some of the (issues pertaining to) the basic principles of net neutrality next year," Trai chairman RS Sharma told PTI in an interview. As per SavetheInternet forum, the net neutrality principle says that internet service providers should not block or discriminate against any applications or content that ride over those networks. A debate on net neutrality stirred across the country after Airtel decided to charge separately for internet-based calls but withdrew it later after people protested. Internet activists and experts flayed the operator for 'Airtel Zero' service along with Facebook's internet.org service, currently renamed 'Free Basics'. "Just as your phone company shouldn't decide who you can call and what you say on that call, your ISP (internet service provider) shouldn't be concerned with the content you view or post online," says the forum. However, there are issues between telecom operators, internet-based companies and consumer interest which has to be balanced by the regulator. Amid debate over zero-rating plans and telecom firms offering discounted tariffs for accessing certain websites, Trai issued a consultation paper seeking comments on whether such differential pricing should be allowed. Facebook's Internet.org had partnered with Reliance Communications in February this year to provide free internet access to many websites as part of the initiative. "When some issues are big, you need to resolve them part-by-part. We are currently dealing with the issues as they arrive," Sharma said. The 20 most beautiful women of 2015Risottop.com The Ultimate Way to Get Cheap Hotel RoomsSave70

FSMI Hyderabad launches campaign against Free Basics

The Hyderabad chapter of the Free Software Movement of India (FSMI) is going to organize a four-day long campaign against Facebook's controversial Free Basics initiative. "Facebook misinformed and under informed its users about Free Basics," Siddhartha, a member of Swecha, part of FSMI, told ET. FSMI is a national coalition of various regional and sectoral free software movements operating in different parts of India, and is also running an online campaign to highlight the problems with Free Basics through its website. Free Basics, which Facebook says is part of its Internet.org initiative, aims to provide free access to basic internet services by partnering with telecom companies. Such practices, commonly referred to as "zero-rating," allows users to access select applications or websites, free of data charges, by striking deals with telecom operators. Facebook's "Save Free Basics" campaign, launched a couple of weeks ago, is urging users to show support for digital equality in India, in response to a paper by the telecom regulator which is seeking comments on differential pricing practices such as Airtel Zero of Facebook's Free Basics.