Bharti Airtel has said that internet companies like Google, Yahoo and Facebook should share revenues with telecom operators and the The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) should impose interconnection charges for data services just like it is applied for voice calls.
“Today, Google, Yahoo and others are enjoying at the cost of network operator. We are the ones investing in setting up data pipes and they make the money. There is interconnection for voice then why not for data,” Jagbir Singh, Director, Network Services Group, Bharti Airtel has said, adding, “Network is capital intensive, we have to pay for spectrum and voice revenue is coming down. At the same time, companies like Google, which have not invested more than a few billion dollars, are enjoying valuations that are ten times that of a traditional telecom player. It’s an unfair game.”
For Airtel, traffic from Web sites such as Facebook, Twitter and Google account for nearly 40 per cent of its overall data traffic and, therefore, wants to get some part of the revenue. Data traffic on Airtel’s 3G network is increasing by 200 per cent and by 100 per cent on 2G. Airtel has launched fourth generation based (4G) mobile data services in Kolkata and Bangalore and is set to launch in Pune and Chandigarh.
Come on sir, you telecom companies were robbing our wallets for years. Now you are looking at luring another treasure chest. 236KBPS they call it 3G and charge terribly. You are playing unfair game Mr.Jug beer.
Don't ride your luck, Mr. Jagbir Singh. Google might just decide to enter the telecom field. Android is becoming the numero uno platform in smartphones. Microsoft is already there with skype. Operating in a market rigged by a crooked telecom minister, the telecom companies stayed glued to their slide-rules ignoring the coming of the calculator that would make them redundant. skype, and other peer-to-peer services have been around for quite some time. What has prevented telecom companies from following this lead? Or developing their own pioneering technologies and services? Instead, when the phones became net-enabled, they began charging an arm and a leg for usage based on an MB. For that matter, why should they restrict themselves to the narrow definition of 'telecom', when everything is being digitised, and convergence becomes the norm? I am interested in talk. I am also interested in receiving mail, connecting to the net, and accessing live events. And I am interested in accessing all this on one device, if possible. Unfortunately, you do not seem to have figured this out. Or at least not well enough to win the custom of millions of Indians.