http://scroll.in/article/778655/chart-only-2-out-of-every-100-facebook-users-in-india-support-free-basics

NET NEUTRALITY
Chart: Only 2 out of every 100 Facebook users in India support Free Basics
The social media giant claims that 3.2 million users have already
supported its Free Basics platform.
Mayank Jain  · Yesterday · 07:30 pm

Over the last few days, Facebook has entered the lives of Indians in
an unprecedented way. From front jacket newspaper advertisements
across dailies to billboards announcing the benefits of “digital
equality”, the social media giant is not giving up yet on its Free
Basics platform even though it has been temporarily banned by the
Indian telecom regulator, given the raging debate around net
neutrality. Facebook’s plan to bring free, albeit limited, internet
access to India, hence, has once again brought the issue of net
neutrality to the fore and the public opinion hardly seems to be
divided.

Earlier this year, Facebook faced stiff opposition for its
internet.org platform when Telecom Regulatory Authority of India first
sought public comments while formulating its policy on net neutrality.
Facebook then re-branded it to Free Basics, but little seems to have
changed.

Citizen groups such as Savetheinternet.in have sprung into action once
again to counter Facebook’s claims that its platform doesn’t violate
the principles of free and fair internet access. So far, over 2 lakh
emails have been sent to TRAI where citizens have voiced their
concerns about Free Basics and have presumably opposed differential
pricing of different services on the internet.

Facebook, meanwhile, has countered with its own campaign to muster
support for its initiative and has allowed people to send an email to
TRAI by sending them notifications of friends who have supported the
platform already.

[Chart:
Total internet users in India: 300 million
Facebook's user base in India: 125 million
Those supporting (according to Facebook) Free Basics: 3.2 million]

While some users reported being automatically made signatories to
Facebook’s pitch even if they hovered on their campaign page, Facebook
claims that its platform has been supported by over 3.2 million people
from India already.

What it chose not to mention in its campaign, however, is that even a
support of 3.2 million people for its platform makes for about 1% of
India’s total online population and a mere 2.5% of Facebook’s 125
million-people-strong user base in India.

Facebook also commissioned its own survey where it gave a “broad”
definition of the platform to 3000 odd people and claimed that 86% of
the respondents supported the initiative. While it is hardly a
surprise that a survey commissioned by an organisation has found
support for its own venture, commentators have warned people against
buying into Facebook’s arguments. For instance, investor and
entrepreneur Mahesh Murthy wrote in The Wire that the company which
“tried to silently slime this thing through last year” is trying to
“con us Indians this year again”.

Murthy wrote that Facebook's numbers can't be trusted because people
"were repeatedly shown a misleading petition by Facebook on top of
their pages", they clicked yes and submitted the petition "without
being told both sides of the story, and thinking they were doing
something for a noble cause, and not to further Facebook’s business
strategy. A large number of them, shocked at realizing what they were
conned into doing have since said no."

He went on to explain his criticism of Facebook’s platform through this analogy:
An analogy is this: people need a balanced diet of proteins, fat,
carbs, vitamins and minerals and the government has a distribution
system called Sahakari Bhandars to get these to us. Facebook wants to
use our government system to sell only its branded cocaine and nothing
else, on special shops, to people who can’t access any other shop.




-- 
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