Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

What FreeBasics fervour and Pichai’s India visit mean

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TWO SEEMINGLY unrelated events were significan­t last week. One was a visit to India by search giant Google’s CEO Sundar Pichai, and the other, a fervent appeal by Facebook to support its FreeBasics initiative to provide Internet access to the digitally poor, which provoked controvers­y as activists feel it threatens net neutrality. But the two events are related, and here’s how.

First, some visual imagery. Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg addressed students at IIT Delhi in October, explaining Facebook’s vision to digitally transform the world. He then jogged in front of the India Gate for a photo opportunit­y. Pichai last week addressed students at Shri Ram College of Commerce, my alma mater, speaking of similar goals. He also posed with a cricket bat for photograph­ers.

Fact is, these two gentlemen want to capture India’s imaginatio­n through talk and imagery. Their publicity machines are working in carefully matched moves on a chessboard called India, where the number of mobile internet users is expected to roughly double to 300 million levels by 2017 compared with 2014.

Facebook, as I said once, is trying to be the “social OS” by using its monopolist­ic network of users linked by friendship­s. Google is building on its Android platform that is now the global standard for mobile penetratio­n. It’s Google, not Twitter, which is Facebook’s business rival.

FreeBasics is to Facebook what Android is to Google. Both of them want advertisin­g dollars buzzing in from smartphone­s. Google is betting on search. Facebook is betting on user informatio­n.

Now, FreeBasics opens up possibilit­ies for Facebook. But what it did last week was to ask its users to support FreeBasics in a campaign. But there was no alternativ­e option or vote. This is precisely what activists are worried about. In one simple move, Facebook used its awesome reach to push its own case. Net neutrality is all about equal, unfettered access. Google got into trouble in Europe when its search algorithms weeded out some sites ostensibly because it was fighting spam. Facebook does through selective reach what Google tried through selective search.

In effect, both are cases for regulators to study using principles of competitio­n, fairplay and equality. The world is bigger than geeks with ambitious plans.

 ??  ?? N MADHAVAN
N MADHAVAN

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