To the Chairman, TRAI
Thank you for giving
me this opportunity to share my views on the consultation paper
published by TRAI on March 27, 2015 titled "Regulatory Framework For
Over-the-Top (OTT) Services”. I am worried that this consultation paper
makes sweeping assumptions about the Internet, and does not take a
neutral and balanced view of the subject of Internet Licensing and Net
Neutrality. Any public consultation must be approached in a neutral
manner by the regulator, so that people can form an informed opinion.
I
strongly support an open internet, for which I believe it is critical
to uphold net neutrality and reject any moves towards licensing of
Internet applications and Web services.
I urge
TRAI to commit to outlining measures to protect and advance net
neutrality for all Indians. Net neutrality requires that the Internet be
maintained as an open platform, on which network providers treat all
content, applications and services equally, without discrimination. The
TRAI must give importance to safeguarding the interests of our country’s
citizens and the national objective of Digital India and Make In India,
over claims made by some corporate interests.
I
request that my response be published on the TRAI website alongside
other comments filed, in line with past practice regarding public
consultations. I urge that TRAI issue a specific response to user
submissions after examining the concerns raised by them, and hold open
house discussions across India, accessible to users and startups before
making any recommendations.
Question
1: Is it too early to establish a regulatory framework for Internet/OTT
services, since internet penetration is still evolving, access speeds
are generally low and there is limited coverage of high-speed broadband
in the country? Or, should some beginning be made now with a regulatory
framework that could be adapted to changes in the future? Please comment
with justifications.
There is no need of a
regulatory framework for Internet-based services and apps (which are
also essentially Internet-based services) either at present or in
future, because that would be contrary to the essence of an open
Internet. It also needs to be pointed out that the term “OTT” (over the
top) is an extreme generalisation of the wide variety of Internet
platform and services. It only takes into account the way it is served
to the end user and doesn’t take into account the various other
complexities involved - which is a great disservice.
Any
regulation or licensing of these services will lead to only one thing -
increase of cost of access and degradation of user experience.
Currently, these services are accessible for either a low fee and in
some cases free of cost, and the companies make money through in-app
advertisements. Burdening these services under a regulatory framework
will force them to either increase the access fee or increase
advertisements - both directly affecting the end user. It is also likely
to subdue innovation, because startups will not have the financial
clout to take on an established player. This will also eventually lead
to pockets of monopolies within the Internet-based services space.
Question
2: Should the Internet/OTT players offering communication services
(voice, messaging and video call services through applications (resident
either in the country or outside) be brought under the licensing
regime? Please comment with justifications.
There
is no need to bring Internet platforms offering communication services
under the telecom licensing regime. The way this question is framed
gives an impression that there is a clear distinction between
communication services and other non-communication services on the
internet. This is an incorrect presumption. Many internet services
incorporate real time chat and video services to improve their customer
engagement. A licensing framework will, for sure, work against customer
interest and will stifle innovation. The cost of entry to the market
would increase many times over which will be extremely detrimental to
newer startups who might have more innovative offerings for the market.
Telecom
operators need to have licenses to operate since they use a public
resource: spectrum. It utilizes the spectrum to transmit data packets,
voice and SMS communication and acts a dumb pipe. However, communication
services such as Skype, WhatsApp, Viber and others sit atop the
networks and infrastructure already controlled and owned by the telecom
operators. Where Voice-over-Internet-Protocol services connect into the
normal switched telecom network, TRAI’s VoIP regulations already exist.
Therefore, there is no need for internet-based communication services to
hold separate licenses.
Question
3: Is the growth of Internet/OTT impacting the traditional revenue
stream of Telecom operators/Telecom operators? If so, is the increase in
data revenues of the Telecom Operators sufficient to compensate for
this impact? Please comment with reasons.
There
is absolutely no evidence to suggest that VoIP services like Hike or
Skype are cannibalising voice revenues of telecom operators. In fact,
heads of more than one Indian telecom operator have clearly stated the
same over the past few months. For example, Airtel India CEO Gopal
Vittal had said during the company’s earnings conference call, earlier
this year, that there’s no evidence of VoIP cannibalisation of voice
services. Last year, Idea Cellular MD Himanshu Kapania had also said
that OTT apps like Viber have had some impact on their International
calling business, but on regular voice calls, there was no impact.
A
Morgan Stanley report on the Indian telecom industry from last year
mentions that data revenues is likely to contribute about 23% of telecom
operators’ overall revenues over the next two years. A study jointly
done by AT Kearney and Google estimated that telecom companies will earn
an additional $8 billion in revenues by 2017 due to the proliferation
of data and data-based services.
Question
4: Should the Internet/OTT players pay for use of the Telecom Operators
network over and above data charges paid by consumers? If yes, what
pricing options can be adopted? Could such options include prices based
on bandwidth consumption? Can prices be used as a means of
product/service differentiation? Please comment with justifications.
Internet-based
services and apps don’t pay for telecom operators for using the
network, and it should remain the same going forward. Forcing
Internet-based services to pay extra for using a particular network
negatively impact consumers and harm the Indian digital ecosystem. As
mentioned in the above answer, data revenues of Indian telecom operators
is already on an upswing and is slated to increase rapidly over the
next few years, hence the argument for creating a new revenue source is
not justified.
Charging users extra for
specific apps or services will overburden them, which in turn will lead
to them not using the services at all. It is also akin to breaking up
the Internet into pieces, which is fundamentally against what Net
Neutrality stands for. Also, the Internet depends on interconnectivity
and the users being able to have seamless experience - differential
pricing will destroy the very basic tenets of the Internet.
Question
5: Do you agree that imbalances exist in the regulatory environment in
the operation of Internet/OTT players? If so, what should be the
framework to address these issues? How can the prevailing laws and
regulations be applied to Internet/OTT players (who operate in the
virtual world) and compliance enforced? What could be the impact on the
economy? Please comment with justifications.
Firstly,
there is no regulatory imbalance in regards to Internet-based services
and apps. It is the telecom operators who own spectrum, which is a
public resource, and hence need to be licensed. Internet services don’t
need licenses. Telecom operators provided the pipe or network on top of
which Internet services exist. So, there’s a clear distinction between
the two.
It also needs to be pointed out that
Internet services are already covered by the Information Technology Act,
2008 and the Indian Penal Code. So, there’s no need for a separate
regulatory framework or licensing. In fact, this was the exact argument
telecom operators had earlier made while stating their case for not
regulating mobile value added services (MVAS), which in essence is quite
similar Internet-based services.
Question
6: How should the security concerns be addressed with regard to OTT
players providing communication services? What security conditions such
as maintaining data records, logs etc. need to be mandated for such OTT
players? And, how can compliance with these conditions be ensured if the
applications of such OTT players reside outside the country? Please
comment with justifications.
The internet
services and apps are well-covered under the existing laws and
regulations. These include the Code of Criminal Procedure, Indian
Telegraph Act, Indian Telegraph Rules, and the Information Technology
Act and its different rules pertaining to intermediaries and
interception. These different regulations allow the Indian government
and law enforcement agencies to access the data stored by internet
platforms when deemed legally necessary. Any additional regulations
carry grave risk of breaching user privacy and would also require
constitutional review - especially since the Government is still working
on a proposed Privacy Bill.
The government and
courts also have the power to block access to websites on the grounds
of national security and public order. It has taken similar steps in the
past and has been widely reported by the media. The transparency
reports periodically published by major internet companies suggests
Indian government routinely requests for user data and blocking of user
accounts. Between July 2014 and December 2014, Indian authorities had
5,473 requests for data, covering 7,281 user accounts from Facebook and
the company had a compliance rate of 44.69%. Google had a compliance
rate of 61% with respect to the requests made by different government
agencies across India.
Question
7: How should the OTT players offering app services ensure security,
safety and privacy of the consumer? How should they ensure protection of
consumer interest? Please comment with justifications.
Although
user privacy and security is of paramount importance, additional
regulation carries the inherent risk of breaching user privacy which is
not in the consumer’s interest. The Information Technology Act, 2000
already addresses the security concerns of the user. But more
importantly, any criminal act committed using these platforms can be
tried under the Indian Penal Code. So, there is no need to burden the
internet platforms with additional regulations.
Also,
it is worth noting that many telecom companies in India have not made
information publicly available as to whether and how they comply with
regulations that guarantee security, privacy and safety of the customer.
TRAI’s current paper fails to articulate why the internet services and
apps should be brought under similar regulations.
Question 8:
In
what manner can the proposals for a regulatory framework for OTTs in
India draw from those of ETNO, referred to in para 4.23 or the best
practices summarised in para 4.29? And, what practices should be
proscribed by regulatory fiat? Please comment with justifications.
ETNO
is similar to India’s COAI which makes it an industry lobby group.
Understandably, the suggestions made by ETNO heavily favor the telecom
companies and will be detrimental to customers if India refers to their
suggestions.
ETNO’s stand have been widely
criticized in the past. Europe’s own group of government regulators
[Body of European Regulators for Electronic Communication (BEREC)]
According to Access
Now, ETNO’s recommendations would have meant higher data charges for
customers while from an entrepreneur’s standpoint, it will limit their
ability to reach out to a wider market. For a small but fast growing
startup and digital media sector in India, this can potentially ring the
death knell. ETNO’s suggestions on this subject so far have failed to
have been accepted by any government agency - including the regulators
in their own host countries. It is therefore especially troubling that
TRAI is choosing to make one of their proposals a pillar of this public
consultation here in India.
Question
9: What are your views on net-neutrality in the Indian context? How
should the various principles discussed in para 5.47 be dealt with?
Please comment with justifications.
Net
Neutrality, by definition, means no discrimination of traffic flowing on
the internet with respect to speed, access and price. Chile and Brazil,
which are developing countries just like India, have passed laws
supporting net neutrality. This is in addition to government commitments
to implement net neutrality legislation in the United States and
European Union.
India has 1 billion people
without internet access and it is imperative for our democracy to have
an open and free internet where users are free to choose the services
they want to access—instead of a telecom operator deciding what
information they can access.
Internet apps and
services are expected to contribute 5% to India’s GDP by 2020. That will
only happen of entrepreneurs, big and small, have a level playing field
that encourages innovation and non-preferential treatment—something
that net neutrality ensures.
Assuming there is
no net neutrality, only the big players will be able to strike deals
with telcos while the smaller players remain inaccessible, which will go
against the principles of net neutrality as listed below:
No blocking by TSPs and ISPs on specific forms of internet traffic, services and applications.
No slowing or “throttling” internet speeds by TSPs and ISPs on specific forms of internet traffic, services and applications.
No preferential treatment of services and platforms by TSPs and ISPs.
It
is also worth noting that the proposed framework will give too much
power in the hands of the telecom companies, which is not healthy for
the ecosystem.
Question
10: What forms of discrimination or traffic management practices are
reasonable and consistent with a pragmatic approach? What should or can
be permitted? Please comment with justifications.
This
question assumes that traffic discrimination is necessary and is a
norm. Rather, traffic discrimination should be an exception as it is
against the principles of net neutrality.
In
such exceptional cases, telecom companies need to have the permission of
TRAI or other competent government agency through public hearing to
carry out “traffic management” to ensure transparency in the entire
process. Further, it should be kept in mind that such steps shouldn’t
interfere with the access, affordability and quality of the services.
Keeping this in mind, TRAI needs to
ensure that instances of discrimination of traffic should be few, far
between and, above all, transparent.
Question
11: Should the TSPs be mandated to publish various traffic management
techniques used for different OTT applications? Is this a sufficient
condition to ensure transparency and a fair regulatory regime?
Publishing
detailed reports of various traffic management techniques for different
internet services is a step in the right direction but it is definitely
not sufficient. I believe it gives a false impression to consumers that
traffic management is a permissible act, which it is not as it goes
against the tenets of net neutrality. Making the various traffic
management techniques public would ensure transparency to some extent
but it fails to bring in accountability on the part of telecom
operators—which is equally important.
There
needs to be an auditing mechanism that would scrutinize and penalize
telecom companies in case of any unlawful traffic management techniques.
Also, telecom companies should be mandated to submit any traffic
management-related data to TRAI, which should be made publicly available
on TRAI's website.
Question
12: How should a conducive and balanced environment be created such
that TSPs are able to invest in network infrastructure and CAPs are able
to innovate and grow? Who should bear the network upgradation costs?
Please comment with justifications
The question
assumes that a “balanced” environment would lead to increased
investment and upgradation of networks.. However, if revenue is
generated by charging CAPs to reach customers rather than only charging
users for data, the incentives for a TSP can potentially change. Telecom
operators now gain the incentive to maintain a level scarcity and not
upgrade existing infrastructure in order to maximize gatekeeper revenue.
There is no evidence to support that access fees charged to CAPs will
spark network upgradation and may have the opposite effect itself.
We’ve
mentioned before that telecom operators should be acting as data pipes
which can provide users access to Internet and that they stand to
substantially gain from upgrading networks. Telecom operators stand to
gain substantially by upgrading existing networks by proliferating the
use of data by users, and it therefore stands to reason that the costs
of upgradation should be borne by them. The above answers also point out
that the heads of the leading telecom operators in the country have not
seen evidence of cannibalization of existing services and that data
usage has only been steadily increasing.
Question
13: Should TSPs be allowed to implement non-price based discrimination
of services? If so, under what circumstances are such practices
acceptable? What restrictions, if any, need to be placed so that such
measures are not abused? What measures should be adopted to ensure
transparency to consumers? Please comment with justifications.
Discrimination
of services in any form is detrimental for the growth of the telecom
industry itself and there should be no circumstance for a telecom
operator to do so. Given the diverse nature of the Internet, telecom
operators should not be allowed to determine what type of service should
get more priority. For example, a consumer in India probably relies on
VoIP calls to keep in touch with people abroad and if there is
throttling of these services, it infringes on the user’s fundamental
right of freedom of expression. An Internet service that a telecom
operator thinks which could lead to traffic congestion, might be vital
to consumers. Further, a telecom operator might use throttling to
further a service promoted by them and induce consumers into using them,
thereby eliminating choice.
Transparency alone
will not bring about a fair regime for users, and it is crucial that
TSPs be prohibited from discriminating between services
Question
14: Is there a justification for allowing differential pricing for data
access and OTT communication services? If so, what changes need to be
brought about in the present tariff and regulatory framework for
telecommunication services in the country? Please comment with
justifications.
The question above is simply a
rephrasing Question 13. Differential pricing for data access and OTT
communication services again simply amounts to discrimination of data
services. Hence there is no justification for differential pricing other
than furthering corporate profit. Telecom operators stand to gain
substantially from the proliferation of all data services including
communication services. A neutral internet allows smaller companies to
innovate and compete with larger players and ensure that there is a free
market. Any changes in the present tariff and regulatory framework is
not needed save for ensuring that the interests of the consumer is taken
care of.
Question
15: Should OTT communication service players be treated as Bulk User of
Telecom Services (BuTS)? How should the framework be structured to
prevent any discrimination and protect stakeholder interest? Please
comment with justification.
Treating OTT
communication service players as Bulk User of Telecom Services again
amounts to discrimination of data services and hence it should not be
allowed. The question also further assumes that the stakeholders are
only the telecom operators and not the consumers. If only the interests
of the telecom operators are protected by treating services which
compete with their traditional services differently rather than
innovating themselves, it would lead to a situation of
anti-competitiveness. Telecom companies have an interest in imposing
their control over information and communication networks, but the price
of that would mean stifling competition, increased barriers for
innovation and business and eventually infringe on the fundamental
rights of Indian citizens.
Question 16: What framework should be adopted to encourage India-specific OTT apps? Please comment with justifications.
A
recent Deloitte report titled Technology, Media and Telecommunications
India Predictions 2015 predicted that paid apps will generate over Rs
1500 crore revenues in 2015 (
http://bit.ly/1alhH5S).
Increased acceptance of paid apps can only be possible if there’s
Network Neutrality. In fact, Deepinder Goyal, the founder and CEO of the
highly successful app Zomato recently commented "Couldn’t have built
Zomato if we had a competitor on something like Airtel Zero"
The
moment an app developer/company is forced to tie-up with a telecom
operator to ensure that users opt for it, an artificial prohibitive
barrier will be created. All app developers and the companies behind
them need to be provided an even playing field.
We
also need more reports on the Indian app economy, to understand,
firstly, how the adoption and usage of apps is changing and, secondly,
to comprehend its impact on the Indian economy.
Question
17: If the OTT communication service players are to be licensed, should
they be categorised as ASP or CSP? If so, what should be the framework?
Please comment with justifications.
The
question of categorising doesn’t even arise, because as mentioned
earlier any extra regulations or licensing is going to be detrimental to
the end user. Requiring licensing of online services and mobile apps
under the current telecom framework in India will have enormous negative
consequences. The impossibly onerous burdens imposed by such licensing
would results in many such globally developed services and apps not
being launched in India - and our own startup efforts to develop local
versions of such apps being killed in their early stages. The net
results would be decreased consumer benefit and a massive slowdown in
innovation and reduced “Make in India” efforts due to the regulatory
cost of doing business becoming very high.
Question
18: Is there a need to regulate subscription charges for OTT
communication services? Please comment with justifications.
Subscription
charges for such apps need to be allowed to evolve as it would in a
pure market economy. The subscribers (buyers) would want to pay the
lowest possible price, and the app developers/companies (sellers) would
want to charge as much as possible, eventually leading to a fair price.
Subscription
charges for such Internet-based services have remained, more or less,
quite low in India, especially because the cost of switching from one
service provider to another is also quite low: This competition will
ensure that charges remain fair, without the need to regulate them,
going forward as well. As noted in response to earlier questions,
existing Indian law also applies to online services - which would
include the Consumer Protection Act and other regulations meant to
prevent cheating or other illegal pricing issues.
Question
19: What steps should be taken by the Government for regulation of
non-communication OTT players? Please comment with justifications.
As
mentioned earlier, irrespective of what an OTT app is used for
(communication, online shopping, etc) they’re all essentially
Internet-based services, and hence there is no question of creating new
regulatory measures.
Question 20: Are there any other issues that have a bearing on the subject discussed?
In
the interim, TRAI should issue an order or regulation preventing
network neutrality violations by telecom service providers. Some telecom
companies have shown scant respect for the issues presently under
consideration and despite its questionable legality have rolled out
various services which violate network neutrality. Any delay in forming
regulations or preventing them in the interim till the process is
complete is only likely to consolidate their status. This is not only an
affront to the Internet users in India but also to the regulatory
powers of the TRAI.
If the question of
regulating subscription charges arises because of the fear of OTT
communication services/VoIP cannibalising Voice services by telcos, then
it needs to be pointed out that more than one telecom operator in India
has already come out and said that there’s no evidence to support such a
fear.
Earlier this year, Airtel India CEO
Gopal Vittal had clearly said during the company’s earnings conference
call that there’s no evidence of VoIP cannibalisation of voice services (
http://bit.ly/1DzZQ77
- pdf). Last year, Idea Cellular MD Himanshu Kapania had also said that
OTT apps like Viber have had some impact on their International calling
business, but on regular voice calls, there was no impact (
http://www.medianama.com/2014/07/223-idea-cellular-viber/).