Zuckerberg asks India to allow free net service
Mumbai – Facebook Chairman and founder Mark Zuckerberg made a personal appeal in an op-ed column in one of India’s leading newspapers for the country to allow a free internet service that has stirred controversy among competitors and questions from the country’s regulators.
Facebook’s proposed Free Basics plan will allow customers to access the Facebook social-networking site and other services such as education, healthcare, and employment listings from their phones without a data plan. Activists have opposed Free Basics because it would threaten the principles of net neutrality and change the pricing for access to different websites.
“This isn’t about Facebook’s commercial interests – there aren’t even any ads in the version of Facebook in Free Basics,” wrote Zuckerberg.
“If people lose access to free basic services they w
ill simply lose access to the opportunities offered by the internet today.”
This month, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India asked in a “consultation paper” whether telecommunications service providers should be allowed to have differential pricing for data usage on different websites, applications and platforms.
Activists have argued that Free Basics is a “land grab on government property” and that with data rates being low, eventually “everybody will be on the full and open internet.”
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