My colleague, Parminder Sing has written an op-ed in The Hindu today,
alerting us to a issue which has not been discussed so far in the free
basics issue - of platform abuse by Facebook. "about how Facebook used its
monopoly social networking platform for a huge political campaign in its
own favour, making and sharing lakhs (11 million, according to Facebook) of
template responses to the regulator’s consultation. The same platform
functionality was not available to other users, who could be holding other
views on the subject...."

Am sharing the article below (
http://www.thehindu.com/opinion/op-ed/what-free-basics-did-not-intend-to-do/article8102897.ece
)

What Free Basics did not intend to do
    Parminder Jeet Singh

The public now sees the Internet not just in market terms, but as a social
phenomenon that requires public interest regulation.

In its aggressive campaign for Free Basics, couched in simplistic
developmental language, Facebook underestimated the political
sophistication of the Indian public. It must be regretting it now. The
social networking service’s reportedly Rs. 100-crore campaign, through
double full-page newspaper advertisements, billboards and television,
appears simply to have congealed public opinion against Free Basics.
Everyone seems to be eager to discuss and write about what is wrong with
Free Basics. When the regulator had last called for Net neutrality-related
inputs, in May 2015, the opinions were relatively more divided. If they are
so much more polarised today against Free Basics and Net neutrality
violations, the manner in which Facebook pushed this campaign does bear
some responsibility for it.

Facebook’s campaign may actually have ended up doing a lot of good to
India, which, after all, was its professed goal. We must thank Facebook for
that. These benefits have been on two explicit fronts, and one more which
will become apparent in some time.

The Internet as a right

Parminder Jeet Singh
First, the campaign forced everyone to respond to the question, ‘can those
in poverty be denied connectivity?’ The obvious answer being ‘no’, everyone
had to come up with concrete alternatives. As a result, something
interesting happened. Even with the current middle-class sentiment largely
being pro-free markets and anti-government subsidies, a strong opinion has
emerged that those who cannot afford connectivity must be provided some
basic free connectivity as an entitlement to be ensured by the government.
It can be in the form of a limited data package. Many commentators as well
as responses to the regulator’s consultation have sought such an
entitlement.

This should make the regulator and the government think seriously about
some such data entitlement for every citizen. It could also have an impact
on how connectivity through the government’s National Optical Fibre Network
will be provided to the people. This network, connecting almost the whole
of rural India, is expected to be in place within the next two-four years.
Such emerging public opinion in favour of free basic connectivity, if
concretised into public policy, will be the first true expression of the
Internet as a right, a concept which has begun to be discussed globally.

The second unintended consequence of the Free Basics campaign has been a
groundswell of public consciousness that now sees the Internet not just in
pure market terms, but as a unique social phenomenon which requires special
public interest regulation. The last round of Net neutrality consultation
was the first heave in this direction, but it was still a bit tentative and
immature. It is also much easier for people to see the logic for an
Internet that treats all content equally, than develop a case against a
free service. (Remember, free service is already the dominant Internet
service model in application and content layers, a point which we will come
to later.) That the Indian public could form a considered opinion on this
rather complex social and policy issue is heartening to note. It is likely
to usher a new era of Internet rights activism, with people claiming
digital technologies as a right and not just something that the market
provides on its own terms.

At the many public interest discussions on this subject, people came up
with ingenious analogies. One person said, “I am ready to pay the auto
driver according to the distance travelled, not based on the destination
that I go to.” Another said, “Free Basics is like someone giving you
cooking gas for free, but being able to decide what you will cook with it.”
There is an emergence of a very sophisticated orientation as to how people
see the Internet in terms of its very crucial and strong role in society
today, and its hidden manipulative possibilities.

The cooking analogy is not a far-fetched one if one projects ahead into the
emerging world of Internet of Things. The Internet can be seen as a new
neutral system of society, one that organises our lives, which can become
very dangerous if its manipulative potential is not closely watched and
kept in check. There will always be corporatist tendencies to place
‘control points’ on this neutral network, with various kinds of free
services as the incentive, but which would lead to far greater economic and
other forms of exploitation.

Neutrality in all layers

This brings us to the third unintended consequence of the Facebook
campaign. This is only being informally talked about as of now, but will
break into prominence soon when other similar ‘platform abuses’ come to the
fore. This is about how Facebook used its monopoly social networking
platform for a huge political campaign in its own favour, making and
sharing lakhs (11 million, according to Facebook) of template responses to
the regulator’s consultation. The same platform functionality was not
available to other users, who could be holding other views on the subject.

The implications of such ‘platform abuse’ are not difficult to see. Imagine
a close election contest in the future when Facebook, say, has 70 per cent
of adult Indians as its users. There are two main parties and, say, FDI or
higher corporate taxes has become the key election issue. What if Facebook
does a similar campaign two weeks before the elections, taking a strong
position favouring one side, reaching and ‘engaging’ its users in a manner
that others cannot do using the same platform?

The question then is, if a telco cannot be allowed to provide different
functionalities on its platform to different content and
application-providers, how can a monopoly social networking platform be
allowed to discriminate among its users in such a blatant way and with such
far-reaching social consequences? It is much easier to switch between
telcos today than to even find a good alternative to the Facebook platform.

Net neutrality and ‘zero-rating’ are therefore just the first key Internet
regulation issues that we are facing. As the Internet quickly transforms
our social systems and becomes an essential element, there will soon be
other kinds of ‘platform neutrality’ issues.

The EU is already conducting a public consultation on ‘platform
governance’. The French Digital Council has brought out a comprehensive
report on platform neutrality. A draft bill on Internet rights in the
Italian legislature lays out public interest guidelines for platforms.

The keen public engagement with the issue of Net neutrality and zero-rating
indicates that we will soon hear about other kinds of platform abuses as
well, along with calls for corresponding Internet regulation.

(Parminder Jeet Singh works with the Bengaluru-based NGO, IT for Change. He
has been an advisor to the Chair of the United Nations Internet Governance
Forum. Email: [email protected])




IT for Change, Bengaluru
www.ITforChange.net

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