Trai to give net neutrality recommendations by Oct-end, OTT discussion soon

The new OTT paper is under preparation and will be out "hopefully" in October: RS Sharma

Press Trust of India  |  New Delhi 

Trai chairman RS Sharma
Trai chairman RS Sharma

regulator will come out with its views on by October-end and also start consultation on "residual" issues around over-the-top (OTT) applications soon, its chairman R S Sharma has said.

The Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) has already concluded open house discussions around the controversial issue of and is in the process of drafting the recommendations.

Sharma told PTI in an interview that the regulator will frame its views on "by October-end".

calls for access to content without any discrimination in data speed and cost, and operators and firms have been at loggerheads over various aspects of the contentious issue.

The chief further said the regulator is preparing a consultation paper on "residual issues" with regard to players like WhatsApp, Skype, Hike, among others.

"On OTT, we had floated a consultation paper in early 2015. Much water has flown since then and many of the issues have been taken care of, by our efforts around differential pricing, etc... For the residual issues of OTT, we will float a consultation paper soon," he said.

In March 2015, had initiated a discussion to analyse the implications of proliferation and recommend suitable changes in the regulatory framework, if required.

That paper had touched upon aspects like whether players offering communication services (voice, messaging and video call services) through applications should be brought under the licensing regime, and also had thrown up issues around net-neutrality, and traffic management practices.

It had also sought stakeholders' views on whether the growth of impacted the traditional revenue stream of operators, and if the increase in data revenues of service providers was sufficient to neutralise that impact.

Sharma said that over the last two years, the sector had undergone a "lot of significant changes", and data had assumed centre stage.

"A lot of regulations have also come in between... the world has gone from voice to data. So now we will cull out the residual issues which are still relevant from that (earlier) paper and take it forward... We will take up issues like regulatory imbalance," he added.

The new paper is under preparation and will be out "hopefully" in October, he added but did not comment on the specifics.

An official familiar with the development said that the "residual issues" could deal with larger question around level-playing field between offerings (like voice and messaging) and the services offered by licensed service providers.

It may also look at issues around security practices such as data records and logs that need to be put in place for players, the official added.

The term refers to applications and services which are accessible over the and ride on operator networks offering access services, that is, social networks, search engines, video aggregation sites. Skype, Viber, WhatsApp, and Hike are some examples of services.

First Published: Mon, October 02 2017. 14:05 IST