India has become a battleground over the right to unrestricted Internet access, with local tech start-ups joining the front line against Facebook Inc founder Mark Zuckerberg and his plan to roll out free Internet to the country’s masses.
The Indian government has ordered Facebook’s Free Basics plan to be put on hold while it decides what to do.
The program, launched in around about dozen developing countries, offers pared-down Web services on mobile phones, along with access to Facebook’s own social network and messaging services, without charge.
However, critics say the program, launched 10 months ago in India in collaboration with operator Reliance Communications Ltd, violates principles of net neutrality, the concept that all Web sites are treated equally.
It would put small content providers and start-ups that do not participate in it at a disadvantage, they say.
“India is a test case for a company like Facebook and what happens here will affect the roll out of this service in other smaller countries where perhaps there is not so much awareness at present,” said Mishi Choudhary, a New York-based lawyer who works on technology and Internet advocacy issues.
Also at stake is Facebook’s ambition to expand in its largest market outside the US. Only 252 million of India’s 1.3 billion people have Internet access, making it a growth market for firms like Google and Facebook.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on Thursday said it had received record submissions for a public consultation that precedes the rule-making process.
However, more than three-quarters of the 1.8 million comments submitted by users via Facebook will be disregarded as they did not follow the proper format, TRAI chairman Ram Sevak Sharma told a news conference.
In the past week, Facebook has urged users in India to send a response to the TRAI both through its social networking platform and through mobiles by dialing a number that automatically generates a response on the users’ behalf.
However, the social media giant faces stiff resistance.
In a letter seen by Reuters, the heads of nine start-ups including Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (阿里巴巴)-backed Paytm and dining app Zomato have written to the TRAI urging it to ensure Internet access was allowed without differential pricing.
The executives said differential pricing for Internet access would lead to a “few players like Facebook with its Free Basics platform acting as gate-keepers.”
Zuckerberg has become personally involved.
“We know that for every 10 people connected to the Internet, roughly one is lifted out of poverty,” he wrote in the Times of India newspaper this week. “We know that for India to make progress, more than 1 billion people need to be connected to the Internet. What reason is there for denying people free access to vital services for communication, education, healthcare, employment, farming and women’s rights?”
A Facebook spokesman said the aim of the Free Basics initiative was to give people a taste of what the Internet can offer, and Facebook has issued a series of full-page newspaper advertisements and billboard banners in an aggressive campaign to counter the protests.
"Free Basics is at risk of being banned, slowing progress towards digital equality in India," an advertisement published in Mumbai newspapers on Wednesday said, urging Internet users to support the initiative.
Launched last year in Zambia, Free Basics, earlier known as internet.org, has run in to trouble elsewhere on grounds that it infringes the principle of net neutrality. Authorities in Egypt effectively suspended the service when a required permit was not renewed after it lapsed on Wednesday.
The TRAI has asked Facebook and Reliance Communications to suspend Free Basics until a final policy decision is made next month.
"In a democracy you have both sides — you have Facebook spending so much on the campaign and on the other side you have internet activists making their own efforts," the TRAI's Sharma said on Wednesday. "Our job is to make a policy that is in the interest of telecom operators and end users in India."
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