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Digital India should not hide big corporate interests: Rahul Gandhi
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SME Times News Bureau | 01 Feb, 2016
Having failed so far to come up with a coherent policy on net
neutrality, the Narendra Modi government must guard against allowing
Digital India to become a surrogate for the interests of big
corporations, Congress vice president Rahul Gandhi said on Sunday.
"NASSCOM
has asked for net neutrality, over 500 start-up entrepreneurs are
pleading for it, young in India have been demanding it, yet we have a
government which under the pretext of repeated discussions has been
delaying framing a clear-cut policy on this,” Gandhi said in a
statement.
He said the BJP government quietly looked the other
way when telecom companies introduced price differential through zero
rating plans and attempted to charge for OTT (Over The Top) services.
Addressing
Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Gandhi said: "Digital India cannot become
a euphemism for an Internet controlled by large remote corporations."
"Digital
India should mean Internet connectivity as a public utility, open ended
and generative. With Digital India, people would get more access to
Internet - the whole Internet - and not primarily a filter on the web,"
he stressed.
The Congress leader said his party had always stood
for freedom of the Internet and net neutrality, as it believed that
"Internet Service Providers (ISPs)/Telecom Service Providers (TSPs) and
government should treat all data on Internet equally".
"Congress
Party's and my belief is shaped by our faith that Internet users should
be free to connect to any website or service that they want, enabling a
level playing field on the world wide web," Gandhi said.
He
noted that the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) had issued
consultation papers on the issue twice over, covering similar questions
for consumers to answer on net neutrality, free basics and data price
differentiation.
Gandhi said he and his party recognised "the
danger of privileging a private platform over a public internet,
introducing a new digital divide".
He added that like millions of
Indians out there, he too was "earnestly hoping to see a TRAI report
and Modi government's commitment in favour of an open Internet in its
entirety where there is no ambiguity in regard to difference in pricing
or VOIP".
Launched in July 2015, Digital India is an initiative
of the Modi government to ensure that public services are made available
to citizens electronically by improving online infrastructure and by
increasing Internet connectivity.
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