Mozilla’s Response to TRAI Consultation Paper on Differential Pricing for Data Services

Mozilla-response-letterThe Telecom regulatory Authority of India(TRAI) issued a Consultation Paper on Differential Pricing for Data Services on December 9, 2015 inviting public comments to be sent by December 30, 2015. The paper discusses regulatory principles in pricing of data tariff. It understands the need for non-discrimination and transparency while seeking a balance between that and ensuring wider access to Internet. In this context it raises the important question of dealing with differential tariff plans of the Telecom Service providers (TSPs) who offer zero or discounted tariffs to content of certain websites/applications/platforms.
Many Indian citizens inluding Mozillians are actively responding to TRAI’s consultation paper via savetheinternet.in and advocating the principles of net neutrality and open Internet.

Representing Mozilla, Denelle Dixon-Thayer, Chief Business and Legal Officer submitted our official response on the this consultation paper to TRAI on 29th December 2015, pointing out the harms of differential pricing, exploring alternate business models and recommending investment in improving capabilities via digital literacy and digital skills training, upholding the principles of net neutrality.

As many of you know, in March 2015, a consultation paper by TRAI titled “Regulatory Framework for Over-the-Top (OTT) Services” , raised several questions with bearing on the future of the Internet and its underlying principle of net neutrality. It attracted over a million comments following one of the most extensive public campaigns on the Web in recent Indian history. Mozilla India community was involved in this campaign and Mitchell Baker, Executive Chairwoman of Mozilla Foundation, had written to the Prime Minister of India requesting the government for strong net neutrality protections to defend the openness and vibrance of the Web. In August 2015, Mozilla expressed our appreciation and concerns related to Department of Telecommunications (DoT) committee report on net neutrality in a letter to Ravi Shankar Prasad, Minister of Communications and Information Technology.

Today’s submission to TRAI reaffirms our position on equal rating and the importance of web literacy. Full text of Mozilla’s response to TRAI consultation paper on Differential Pricing for Data Services available below [pdf]

TO:

RS Sharma
Chairman, Telecom Regulatory Authority of India

CC: Vinod Kotwal
Advisor (F&EA), Telecom Regulatory Authority of India

Introduction

Thank you for the opportunity to submit comment on the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India’s Consultation Paper on Differential Pricing for Data Services.

The Mozilla Corporation produces the Firefox web browser and Firefox OS, together adopted by half a billion individual Internet users around the world. Mozilla is also a foundation that educates and empowers Internet users to be the Web’s makers, not just its consumers. Finally, Mozilla is a global community of technologists, thinkers, and builders, including thousands of contributors and developers in India, who work together to keep the Internet alive and accessible.

Connecting the world’s unconnected is one of the great challenges of our time, but in the current global debate on how to accomplish this goal, we believe that the advent of various differential pricing schemes has created harmful normative pressure to interpret “connecting people” to mean connecting them to some parts of the Internet, not all parts of the Internet.

As our Executive Chairwoman Mitchell Baker noted in a May 5th letter to Prime Minister Modi:

“We stand firm in the belief that all users should be able to experience the full diversity of the Web… At a time when users are increasingly being pushed into private, walled gardens and Internet malls providing access to only a limited number of sites, action is needed to protect the free and open Web.”

As TRAI makes reference to in this consultation paper, a variety of business models featuring some form of subsidization and differential pricing have been put forward, many in the name of accelerating the rate at which people are connecting to the Internet. Access is a challenging and still-unsolved problem; yet, we worry about the harm that differential pricing would pose were it to be blessed as part of the solution. While differential pricing does not raise the same prototypical harms associated with net discrimination (i.e., throttling and blocking), we share your concern that many of these models effectively enable unfair prioritization giving rise to anti-competition and anti-innovation effects.

The core principles of net neutrality have created a level playing field that has been critical to the Internet’s success to date. The Internet’s capacity to be an engine for economic and social development, education, opportunity, and innovation will be diminished if we sacrifice these principles and install new gatekeepers in the name of connecting new users.

Harms of differential pricing

The open Internet relies on many technological and legal assumptions for its continued vitality. One of those assumptions is net neutrality: the idea that Internet Service Providers and governments should treat all data on the Internet equally, not discriminating or charging differentially by user, content, site, platform, application, type of attached equipment, or mode of communication. While paid prioritization is frequently invoked as a violation of this principle, subsidization that makes some content available for free, and other content only available at a cost that is prohibitively expensive to some, raises similar concerns. As with blocking, throttling, or paid prioritization, differential pricing can enable gatekeepers who exercise market power to disrupt the Internet’s level playing field. Even with platforms that claim to be open to any site or service that meets certain technical specifications, we are concerned with how open they would be to including a new, startup competitor to their established services and those of their partners.

There are some that argue that differential pricing for a short period of time is justified if it leads to users purchasing access to the full Internet in a reasonably short time period. In assessing claims that differential pricing schemes are successful in moving users who were unconnected to paid plans, we encourage TRAI to look carefully at the data. For example, it is worth investigating the connectivity available to these users before they acquired a SIM with a differential pricing scheme. Put another way, users of differential pricing schemes are not necessarily first time Internet users. While genuine successes in accelerating the rate at which people are connecting to the full diversity of the open Internet may in certain cases outweigh the anti-competition and anti-innovation harms, if such claims prove to have little to no merit, then there would be fewer benefits conferred by differential pricing to counterbalance the harms.

In a context of difficult practical questions around promoting access to and adoption of Internet connectivity, we welcome TRAI’s investigation into differential pricing schemes, given the potential for significant harm to both the orderly growth of the telecom sector and the consumer interest in the long term. As the TRAI exercises its oversight and regulation of such product offerings, we believe you will be well served by the principles you have previously enumerated: Non-discriminatory, transparency, not anti-competitive, non-predatory, non-ambiguous, and not misleading.

Alternative models

In the belief that there can and must be business models that will serve to connect the unconnected, and connect them to the full diversity of the open Internet without violating the principles of net neutrality, Mozilla is exploring alternatives to this end as part of our work on Equal-Rating. We are conducting research to better understand the complex nexus of Internet openness and Internet access, while at the same time sparking innovation in alternative market solutions.

As the consultation notes, there are already in market a variety of alternative business models that are emerging to help accelerate the rate at which people are connecting to the Internet which do not rely on differential pricing. In a blog post introducing the concept of equal-rating we note two early explorations of such alternative approaches; many more are possible, and will certainly be introduced in years to come.

What is certain, is that we should not accept business models that offer access to only a select few chosen websites for free as the only or ultimate solution to connecting the unconnected. If we are to accelerate the rate at which people are connecting to the Internet, some subsidization may very well be needed. However, a market solution that provides access to all of the Internet is preferable in that it allows “consumers [to] pick the content they choose to access based on the quality of that content, not the financial power and business partnerships of the provider,” as our Executive Chairwoman Mitchell Baker noted in her blog post introducing Equal-Rating.

Investing in improving capabilities

While much of the global conversation around connecting the unconnected has focused on the challenges of improving affordability and infrastructure, we also encourage serious consideration of the value of investing in improving capabilities, specifically digital literacy and digital skills training.

In a recent paper we co-wrote with the GSMA, we detail a small scale study we conducted in Bangladesh demonstrating the power of digital literacy. As part of this study, a group of participants received basic web literacy training: they learned about device basics, the difference between apps and browsers, and online identity and privacy. A second group of participants received no training. The results? After four weeks, the first group logged 17 percent higher Web usage and expressed increased ability and a greater desire to become content producers. Indeed, participants in the group that received training actually exceeded the 2GB of data we provided to them for free as part of this study at higher rates than those in the control group. This demonstrates that there is increasingly a business case as well an opportunity for positive government intervention in spurring investment in digital capabilities.

Conclusion

We commend the TRAI and the Government of India for your commitment both to connecting the unconnected and to upholding the principles of net neutrality that have served the Internet so well. We understand the temptation to say “some content is better than no content,” choosing a lesser degree of inclusion over openness and equality of opportunity. But it shouldn’t be a binary choice; technology and innovation can create a better way, even though these new models may take some time to develop. The people of India want net neutrality and want access to the full diversity of the open Internet as reflected by the more than a million submissions that came from users across India in response to TRAI’s last consultation paper; we urge you to heed their call.

Sincerely,

Denelle Dixon-Thayer
Chief Business and Legal Officer

6 comments on “Mozilla’s Response to TRAI Consultation Paper on Differential Pricing for Data Services”

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  1. Bharat Kumar wrote on

    How does a regulator enforce net neutrality ?

    Net neutrality cannot be just about getting a site preferential or zero-rated access over others. Neutrality of access should mean equal effort made to any site request by a consumer, which is a big challenge.

    Internet sites and services which get popular have to be served well by an Internet access service provider. To that end, the telecom network service provider which provides the transit to the Internet Access Service provider, has to provision network equipment and have technical and commercial agreements with other telecom networks and large content providers to guarantee transit and transport of the packets of data.

    So, regulation if any, is possible only through exceptions detected or notified to the regulator. The regulator has to seek resolution via the quasi-judicial competition commissions for violation of anti-trust laws. In a capitalist economy, any other measure or ad hoc executive diktats or tightening of the process could discourage of large investments in infrastructure of scale. Equally, absence or protection for innovations in incubatory stage can provide serious obstacles to innovative processes.

    Reply

    1. Anivar Aravind wrote on

      > How does a regulator enforce net neutrality ?

      You may be interested in reading a sample from Norwegian Regulator here. It explains Net neutrality and zero rating in a very simple language from a regulator perspective.

      Reply

  2. Anish Kuriakose wrote on

    Great! Thank you Mozillians. You see, an open internet will give opportunities to the whole nation as time passes by. The Internet was never made with the intention of restricting use. It is the way to connect the whole wide world. As we move ahead into the future, we are getting closer and closer to the point where every nook and cranny on Earth is interconnected. This can only be achieved through an open Internet, just like how the transportation systems on this planet allows everyone access to any part of the world, though it’s not free to travel around the globe.

    Internet connects the world like no other medium. We could never progress as modern world without a free and open Internet as opposed to sly and restrictive Internet. It’s like putting all people in jail and giving them free food (maybe delicious and nutritious even), but only what the jail authorities choose to feed you or just as much quantity they choose. That’s not the kind of life any human wants. We have fundamental rights and this is a democratic country.

    Reply

  3. John Laprise wrote on

    Rather, zero rating services are like bus services with set routes. The passengers have limited ability to tell the driver where and when to stop but passengers also have the choice about whether to board the bus in the first place.

    Yes, it would be great if everyone had their own transport that would take them wherever they wanted to go but not everyone can afford that. If you lack transport, then you have to rely on the bus service. If it doesn’t go where you want it to go, you have to forego transport or hopefully await a new service that competes with the first. Yes, a public transport system would be great but costly because the routes would have to go everywhere. If they went everywhere, people with their own transport might choose public transport putting added strain on it and at the same time change the ecosystem supporting personal transport and the taxes that make the public transport possible. It’s also not clear that the government is particularly interested in everyone having freedom of movement.

    This is the zero rating situation in India where the Unconnected numbers 80% of the population and if you’re reading this, you’re part of the 20% of the Connected. The priorities of the two groups are not the same just as the priorities of people with and without transport are not the same.

    No method of facilitating access should be dismissed without actual rigorous and applicable evidence.

    Reply

  4. Satta Matka wrote on

    How does a regulator enforce net neutrality ?

    Reply

  5. Satta Matka wrote on

    Thanks in advance guys

    Reply

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