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Net neutrality implies equal access to all websites for all. Any priority given to an application or company on payment basis is seen as violating the concept
The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India has put out a paper on how it plans to change the users’ relationship with Internet, at the bidding of telecom companies. At present, once a user has paid for say 2 GB of surfing, it does not matter how he or she uses it, whether to watch YouTube videos, communicate through Skype, or just read. That's net neutrality. In other words, the telcos are neutral or impartial about the way the traffic flows on the Internet. All this could change. The users may have to pay for specific services. So, if one provider offers free access to Facebook, it could charge for maybe Twitter, or there could be higher rates for Skype. Users will also lose freedom to go anywhere online. Some services will have speedier access, others slower; some will be free, others expensive. Internet will be sliced rather than offered as a whole. The user will be the loser.
Telcos have a point that while they built the network infrastructure, the profits are going to apps. That services like WhatsApp benefit at their cost. The counter is stronger. If telcos invested crores in infrastructure, they also earned lots off it. But innovation rules and always has — that’s the fascinating part about the open platform that Internet is. The freedom it provides to come up with anything new, the spirit of enterprise it accords. Anyone with an idea has a chance. Not anyone with money to pay telcos for allowing free access and score in the absence of competition. It is net neutrality that allows the online seller and the buyer, the giver and the taker to benefit.
Telcos built the infrastructure to sell access to it, not to control what the consumer does on it. Once net neutrality, which is a regulation without a legal framework, is breached, the Internet users' interest would be sold out. Imagine startups failing to put up an online show because the money to pay telecom companies didn't add up.
By: Vishal ProfileResourcesReport error
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