http://scroll.in/article/778805/full-text-facebooks-free-basics-will-limit-internet-freedom-say-50-faculty-of-iits-and-iisc

OPEN LETTER

Full text: Facebook's Free Basics will limit internet freedom, say 50
faculty of IITs and IISc
The service isn't really free and violate user's privacy, the scientists say.

Scroll Staff  · Today · 09:03 am

Close to 50 faculty members of the Indian Institutes of Technology and
Indian Institute of Science on Tuesday released a statement
highlighting flaws in Facebook's controversial Free Basics programme.

Free Basics is a subsidised internet platform that gives users
Facebook and a few other services for free. Facebook says this will
help connect India’s poor people to the internet. However, critics
claim that it works against the rules of net neutrality, according to
which all material on the Internet should be treated equally by
internet service providers. Only a few products and websites,
including Facebook, can be accessed through Free Basics.

The debate about the platform has been especially heated over the past
few days because the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India set
Wednesday as a deadline for the public to submit their opinions about
whether the service should be allowed.

On Tuesday, a group of academics weighed in, claiming that Free Basics
will limit the freedom with which Indians can use their own public
utility, the internet.

Here is the full statement:
Allowing a private entity

- to define for Indian Internet users what is “basic”,

- to control what content costs how much, and

- to have access to the personal content created and used by millions of Indians

is a lethal combination which will lead to total lack of freedom on
how Indians can use their own public utility, the Internet. Facebook's
“free basics” proposal is such a lethal combination, having several
deep flaws, beneath the veil of altruism wrapped around it in TV and
other media advertisements, as detailed below.

Flaw 1: Facebook defines what is “basic”.

The first obvious flaw in the proposal is that Facebook assumes
control of defining what a “basic” service is. They have in fact set
up an interface for services to “submit” themselves to Facebook for
approval to be a “basic” service. This means: what are the “basic”
digital services Indians will access using their own air waves will be
decided by a private corporation, and that too one based on foreign
soil. The sheer absurdity of this is too obvious to point out.

To draw an analogy, suppose a chocolate company wishes to provide
“free basic food” for all Indians, but retains control of what
constitutes “basic” food  ̶  this would clearly be absurd. Further, if
the same company defines its own brand of “toffee” as a “basic” food,
it would be doubly absurd and its motives highly questionable. While
the Internet is not as essential as food, that the Internet is a
public utility touching the lives of rich and poor alike cannot be
denied. What Facebook is proposing to do with this public utility is
no different from the hypothetical chocolate company. In fact, it has
defined itself to be the first “basic” service, as evident from
Reliance's ads on Free Facebook. Now, it will require quite a stretch
of imagination to classify Facebook as “basic”. This is why Facebook's
own ad script writers have prompted Mr. Zuckerberg to instead make
emotional appeals of education and healthcare for the poor Indian
masses; these appeals are misleading, to say the least.

Flaw 2: Facebook will have access to all your apps' contents.

The second major flaw in the model, is that Facebook would be able to
decrypt the contents of the “basic” apps on its servers. This flaw is
not visible to the lay person as it's a technical detail, but it has
deep and disturbing implications. Since Facebook can access
un-encrypted contents of users' “basic” services, either we get to
consider health apps to be not basic, or risk revealing health records
of all Indians to Facebook. Either we get to consider our banking apps
to be not “basic”, or risk exposing the financial information of all
Indians to Facebook. And so on. This is mind boggling even under
normal circumstances, and even more so considering the recent internal
and international snooping activities by the NSA in the US.

Flaw 3: It's not free.

The third flaw is that the term “free” in “free basics” is a marketing
gimmick. If you see an ad which says “buy a bottle of hair oil, get a
comb free”, you know that the cost of the comb is added somewhere. If
something comes for free, its cost has to appear somewhere else.
Telecom operators will have to recover the cost of “free basic” apps
from the non-free services (otherwise, why not make everything free?).
So effectively, whatever Facebook does not consider “basic” will cost
more.

If Facebook gets to decide what costs how much, in effect Indians will
be surrendering their digital freedom, and freedom in the digital
economy, to Facebook. So this is not an issue of elite Indians able to
pay for the Internet versus poor Indians, as Facebook is trying to
portray. It is an issue of whether all Indians want to surrender their
digital freedom to Facebook.

That the “Free Basics” proposal is flawed as above is alarming but not
surprising, for it violates one of the core architectural principles
of Internet design: net neutrality. Compromising net neutrality, an
important design principle of the Internet, would invariably lead to
deep consequences on people's freedom to access and use information.
We therefore urge that the TRAI should support net neutrality in its
strongest form, and thoroughly reject Facebook's “free basics”
proposal.

Krithi Ramamritham, Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Bhaskaran Raman, Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Siddhartha Chaudhuri, Assistant Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Ashwin Gumaste, Associate Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Kameswari Chebrolu, Associate Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Uday Khedker, Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Madhu N. Belur, Professor, EE, IIT Bombay

Mukul Chandorkar, Professor, EE, IIT Bombay

Amitabha Bagchi, Associate Professor, CS&E, IIT Delhi

Vinay Ribeiro, Associate Professor, CS&E, IIT Delhi

Niloy Ganguly, Professor, CS&E, IIT Kharagpur

Animesh Kumar, Assistant Professor, EE, IIT Bombay

Animesh Mukherjee, Assistant Professor, CSE, IIT Kharagpur

Subhashis Banerjee, Professor, CSE, IIT Delhi

Shivaram Kalyanakrishnan, Assistant Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Saswat Chakrabarti, Professor, GSSST, IIT Kharagpur

H.Narayanan, Professor, EE, I.I.T Bombay

Vinayak Naik, Associate Professor, CSE, IIIT-Delhi

Aurobinda Routray, Professor, EE, IIT Kharagpur

Naveen Garg, Professor, IIT Delhi

Amarjeet Singh, Assistant Professor, CSE, IIIT-Delhi

Purushottam Kulkarni, Associate Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Supratik Chakraborty, Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Kavi Arya, Associate Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

S. Akshay, Assistant Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Jyoti Sinha, Visiting Faculty, Robotics, IIIT Delhi

Joydeep Chandra, Assistant Professor, CSE, IIT Patna

Parag Chaudhuri, Associate Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

Rajiv Raman, Assistant Professor, IIIT-Delhi

Mayank Vatsa, Associate Professor, IIIT-Delhi

Anirban Mukherjee, Associate Professor, EE, IIT Kharagpur

Pushpendra Singh, Associate Professor, IIIT-Delhi

Partha Pratim Das, Professor, CSE, IIT Kharagpur

Dheeraj Sanghi, Professor, IIIT Delhi

Karabi Biswas, Associate Professor, EE, IIT Kharagpur

Bikash Kumar Dey, Professor, EE, IIT Bombay

Mohammad Hashmi, Assistant Professor, ECE, IIIT Delhi

Venu Madhav Govindu, Assistant Professor, EE, IISc Bengaluru

Murali Krishna Ramanathan, Assistant Professor, CSA, IISc Bangalore

Sridhar Iyer, Professor, IIT Bombay

Sujay Deb, Assistant Professor, ECE, IIIT Delhi

Virendra Sule, Professor, EE, IIT Bombay

Om Damani, Associate Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

V Rajbabu, Assistant Professor, EE, IIT Bombay

Hema Murthy, Professor, CSE, IIT Madras

Anupam Basu, Professor, CSE, IIT Kharagpur

Sriram Srinivasan, Adjunct Professor, CSE, IIT Bombay

K.V.S. Hari, Professor, ECE, IISc, Bengaluru

Ashish Mishra, CSA IISc , Bangalore

Shalabh Gupta, EE, IIT Bombay

Suman Kumar Maji, EE, IIT Patna


-- 
Peace Is Doable

-- 
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups 
"Green Youth Movement" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email 
to [email protected].
To post to this group, send an email to [email protected].
Visit this group at https://groups.google.com/group/greenyouth.
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/d/optout.

Reply via email to