"We at Nasscom oppose any model where TSPs (Telecom service providers) have a say or discretion in choosing a content that is made available at favourable rates or speeds etc," Nasscom President R Chandrashekhar said today.
He further said that Nasscom has submitted its views before regulator Trai requesting not to allow operators price different kinds of services differently such as higher (rpt) higher prices for video streaming, accessing e-commerce websites thereby segmenting the internet.
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) has invited comments from public till January 7 on its paper on differential data pricing - a key aspect of the raging debate on net neutrality.
A debate on net neutrality stirred across the country after Airtel decided to charge separately for Internet-based calls but withdrew it later after people protested.
Trai's paper mentions some plans which amount to differential tariffs of the telecom service provider who offer zero or discounted tariffs to certain contents of some websites, applications or platforms.
Facebook has been aggressively campaigning to support Free Basics service as it fears that platform may be banned in India. Facebook has tied up with Reliance Communications to offer the free Internet platform to its customers.
Earlier, Trai asked RCom to keep services of Facebook's free Internet platform, Free Basics, in abeyance, till the issue on differential pricing is sorted out.
"It is also critical that such differential pricing should not become a tool that facilitates market dominance or enables anti-competitive behavior by either TSP or platform provider or result in direct or indirect commercial benefit including by leveraging the value of customer data that gets generated in the process," Chandrashekhar said.
Talking about start-ups, Reddy said the industry is
continuously building and strengthening its digital solutions capabilities.
"Digital contributed approximately 13 per cent for the leading technology companies. Further, the industry employed over 250,000 digitally skilled employees. Digital M&A deals also witnessed a spike in volume and value crossing USD 2 billion in 2015-16 growing 3 times over last year," he added.
With over 4,200 start-ups, India is now the third largest start-up base with over 1,200 start-ups being created every year aided by USD 4.9 billion worth of funding, over 150 active VC/PEs and over 110 incubators and accelerators.
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