TRAI move to open up Internet telephony within India
By
siliconindia news bureau
New Delhi: Telecom regulator TRAI on Monday has sought the industry experts' views on the issue of allowing ISPs to provide Internet telephony to call landline or mobile subscribers within the country. The move is expected to boost competition in the national long distance segment and trigger further drops in STD tariffs.
The regulator has released a consultation paper on relaxing restrictive provisions of Internet telephony. "The fruits of technological advancements must reach common masses and to that extent regulations must be flexible. If Internet telephony within the country to PSTN/PLMN (landline/mobile) is permitted to Internet Service Providers (ISPs), Indian subscribers may gain from technological advancement, fuelling competition in the telecom sector, resulting in services at affordable price and with better quality," TRAI said.
As per the current license conditions, a subscriber is allowed to use the PC to dial a phone abroad. However, ISPs are not permitted to have interconnection with fixed line or mobile exchanges to provide internet telephony within the country. "There is a demand from ISPs for opening of Internet telephony in the national long distance sector as well," TRAI noted.
Terming it as a "customer-friendly measure that would spark-off 50 percent reduction in the current tariffs," Rajesh Chharia, President of the ISP Association of India, said, "For instance, we can offer STD at 50 paise / minute while local calls can be as low as 15/20 paise per minute. This could bring about a new type of service ? phone to phone calls based on IP platform."
The regulator has released a consultation paper on relaxing restrictive provisions of Internet telephony. "The fruits of technological advancements must reach common masses and to that extent regulations must be flexible. If Internet telephony within the country to PSTN/PLMN (landline/mobile) is permitted to Internet Service Providers (ISPs), Indian subscribers may gain from technological advancement, fuelling competition in the telecom sector, resulting in services at affordable price and with better quality," TRAI said.
As per the current license conditions, a subscriber is allowed to use the PC to dial a phone abroad. However, ISPs are not permitted to have interconnection with fixed line or mobile exchanges to provide internet telephony within the country. "There is a demand from ISPs for opening of Internet telephony in the national long distance sector as well," TRAI noted.
Terming it as a "customer-friendly measure that would spark-off 50 percent reduction in the current tariffs," Rajesh Chharia, President of the ISP Association of India, said, "For instance, we can offer STD at 50 paise / minute while local calls can be as low as 15/20 paise per minute. This could bring about a new type of service ? phone to phone calls based on IP platform."
Reader's comments(1)
1
This kind of a thing exists in the US and also in the UK. A service provider
named Vonage provides an IP based service to customers in the US and UK. For a
fixed fee payable every month, customers can call any landline/mobile number in
the US or UK without paying a single penny extra.
Now, since Vonage uses the Internet to provide the service, one can use the IP
"phone adapter" from anywhere in the world to call the US and UK for almost
nothing. In fact, a lot of small US-based services companies with centers in
India use Vonage to make business happen for about 1400 rupees.
TRAI would do good to allow Internet Telephony in India.
named Vonage provides an IP based service to customers in the US and UK. For a
fixed fee payable every month, customers can call any landline/mobile number in
the US or UK without paying a single penny extra.
Now, since Vonage uses the Internet to provide the service, one can use the IP
"phone adapter" from anywhere in the world to call the US and UK for almost
nothing. In fact, a lot of small US-based services companies with centers in
India use Vonage to make business happen for about 1400 rupees.
TRAI would do good to allow Internet Telephony in India.
Posted by:
Partha Biswal
- Firms now resort to legal help for lay-offs
- India ranks fourth among top ten internet users
- Mumbai attack to hit business visits from U.S.
- FIIs pull out 77 percent of last year's investment
- Terror puts India among 20 most dangerous places
- Bangalore IT firms offer help to combat terror
- India ranks tenth in spam generation list
- Time to show we are Indians first: PM
- Students protest Wipro recruitment in West Bengal
- TCS focuses SME sector to offer ITaaS
- Terror puts India among 20 most dangerous places
- Mumbai terror: IT clients cancel Bangalore visits
- 'Terrorists have no religion', Aamir Khan
- Expatriate CEOs still feel safe in Mumbai
- Online media comes alive during Mumbai attacks
- Karnataka firms seek licence for modern weapons
- Deccan Mujahideen email threatens Delhi
- MNCs pay more to Indian staff
- Future CEOs may emerge from HR departments
- 'IT industry raised India's international image'




