Kuwait Times

Facebook India row over Internet access for poor

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NEW DELHI: Facebook went on the offensive yesterday in an escalating row with Indian authoritie­s over a controvers­ial initiative which the social network says is aimed at widening online access in the developing world.

The social media giant took out billboards and fullpage newspaper adverts and sent SMSs to defend its Free Basics service, which offers people without the Internet free access to a handful of websites through mobile phones. Free Basics is “at risk of being banned” in India, Facebook said in the adverts, adding that the service aims to help a billion unconnecte­d Indiansmos­tly living in poor rural areas-to get online.

It follows fierce criticism from net neutrality activists who say it violates the principle that the whole Internet should be available to all, unrestrict­ed by any one company. Earlier this month the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India ordered Reliance Communicat­ions, the sole mobile operator for the service, to suspend it temporaril­y without giving a reason, documents seen by AFP show.

“This campaign gives people the opportunit­y to support digital equality in India,” Facebook said in a statement on its Save Free Basics campaign. “We are committed to Free Basics and to working with Reliance and the relevant authoritie­s to help people in India get connected.” Some 3.2 million people have petitioned India’s telecoms regulator not to ban Free Basics, formerly named Internet.org, which launched nationwide last month after being trialed in several states, Facebook said.

The Silicon Valley giant has asked supporters to leave a missed call at a designated number that automatica­lly sends a message to the regulator in support of the service. Several prominent Indian entreprene­urs and members of the tech community have also spoken out against Free Basics, arguing that even for poor citizens, no Internet is better than a hand-picked and corporate-controlled web offering.

“Oh my fellow Indians, either choose this & do a jihaad for independen­t Internet later or pick #NetNeutral­ity today,” tweeted Vijay Shekhar Sharma, the founder of PAYTM, an e-commerce site. India is a key territory for Facebook with 130 million users, making it the social network’s biggest market outside the United States. “It goes about a modern twist to what essentiall­y used to be the white man’s burdenthat India’s poor need Facebook’s FreeBasics to free them,” Amod Malviya, the former chief technology officer for Indian shopping website Flipkart, wrote in a blog post. —AFP

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