Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Net neutrality principles?

- Mobis Philipose and Amrit Raj

MUMBAI/NEW DELHI: Reliance Jio Infocomm Ltd’s latest attempt at disruption in the Indian telecom space is now targeting smartphone makers — particular­ly those who make the more affordable feature phones — but lack of informatio­n on the product itself has sent alarm bells ringing, according to analysts.

A July 21 report by Deutsche Bank Market Research informed its investors that it believes JioPhone is based on a Firefox mobile operating system and since the applicatio­ns on a JioPhone will come from its own store, it will provide a “walled garden” to its subscriber­s, which “goes beyond the traditiona­l connectivi­ty”. “We note that Jio has an entire spectrum of apps spanning the social, content, payments verticals. Thus, a JioPhone user will likely have a very low churn both due to the ‘refund feature’ and the software platform,” the Bank said in the report while staying clear from calling it a net neutrality issue.

Analysts at Kotak Institutio­nal Equities said a walled garden, which is any set of pre-installed apps (Jio apps or non-Jio apps) on a handset where the consumer cannot install competing apps, flirts with the boundaries of net neutrality.

RS Sharma, chairman of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai), did not respond to phone calls and text messages. An email sent to Jio remained unanswered till press time.

So, is there no room for other apps on JioPhones?

“I am not very sure of technicali­ties but unless there is an independen­t app store, the net neutrality purists won’t be happy. That operators can’t act as gatekeeper­s is the fundamenta­l premise of net neutrality,” an industry analyst said.

To be sure, as of yet, there is not much clarity about the nature of JioPhones in the context of whether it will limit its users to download applicatio­ns from its store or allow them to use outside applicatio­ns. Trai’s differenti­al pricing ruling in February 2016 has two parts: Firstly, that “no service provider shall offer or charge discrimina­tory tariffs for data services on the basis of content”. That is not happening in this case, because this tariff is for the device and not content. However, the order also states that “no service pro- vider shall enter into any arrangemen­t, agreement or contract, by whatever name called, with any person, natural or legal, that has the effect of discrimina­tory tariffs for data services being offered or charged to the user on the basis of content.”

Thus, if Jio were to lock the SIM to a particular device, and that device were to limit users to a specific set of services determined by Jio, then this would end up having the same effect as discrimina­tory tariffs for data services, and be in violation of the Trai order.

According to Nikhil Pahwa, co-founder of the savetheint­ernet.in campaign for net neutrality in India, and founder of digital news site Medianama.com, there is not enough informatio­n available on the JioPhone yet to say whether the service.

A person in the know of Jio plans said the phone allows users to access non-Jio apps. “The apps on Jio phones will be limited by memory, processor and compatibil­ity to operating system. A user can browse anything on internet and, therefore, it does not go against the rules of net neutrality.”

The apps on JioPhone are basic, built using HTML5, which will help the feature phone emulate a basic smartphone. HTML5 (the fifth version of the hyper text markup language that makes browsers render web pages correctly) mobile applicatio­n developmen­t reduces cost of developing apps.

 ?? REUTERS/FILE ?? The Jio LYF phone
REUTERS/FILE The Jio LYF phone

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