---
abstract: |
  The popular misconception around the report -- that it is anti-net
  neutrality -- follows the lack of nuance in Net Neutrality discourse.
archive-url: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230909090114/http://policywonks.in//commentary/dot-panel-report-on-net-neutrality-and-the-misconceptions-around-it"
author:
- Pranesh Prakash
authors:
- Pranesh Prakash
categories:
- Net neutrality
- Internet governance
citation:
  abstract: The popular misconception around the report -- that it is
    anti-net neutrality -- follows the lack of nuance in Net Neutrality
    discourse.
  accessed: 2019-01-13
  archive: "https://web.archive.org/web/20230909090114/http://policywonks.in//commentary/dot-panel-report-on-net-neutrality-and-the-misconceptions-around-it"
  author: Pranesh Prakash
  available-date:
    date-parts:
    - - 2015
      - 7
      - 21
    iso-8601: 2015-07-21
    literal: 2015-07-21
    raw: 2015-07-21
  citation-key: prakashDoTPanel2015
  container-title: PolicyWonks.in
  issued:
    date-parts:
    - - 2015
      - 7
      - 21
    iso-8601: 2015-07-21
    literal: 2015-07-21
    raw: 2015-07-21
  license: Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0
    International License (CC-BY-NC-SA)
  title: DoT panel report on net neutrality and the misconceptions
    around it
  type: article-newspaper
  URL: "http://policywonks.in//commentary/dot-panel-report-on-net-neutrality-and-the-misconceptions-around-it"
comments:
  hypothesis:
    theme: clean
date: 2015-07-21
engines:
- path: /opt/quarto/share/extension-subtrees/julia-engine/\_extensions/julia-engine/julia-engine.js
license:
  text: CC BY-NC 4.0
  type: creative-commons
  url: "https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/"
listing-page: ../press.html
original-url: "http://policywonks.in//commentary/dot-panel-report-on-net-neutrality-and-the-misconceptions-around-it"
publication: PolicyWonks.in
title: DoT panel report on net neutrality and the misconceptions around
  it
title-block-categories: true
toc-title: Table of contents
---

# DoT panel report on net neutrality and the misconceptions around it

------------------------------------------------------------------------

There have been many misconceptions about what the DoT Panel Report on
Net Neutrality says: the most popular ones being that they have
recommended higher charges for services like WhatsApp and Viber, and
that the report is an anti-Net neutrality report masquerading as a
pro-Net neutrality report.

## Background of the DoT panel

In January 2015, the Department of Telecommunication (DoT)
[formed](http://articles.economictimes.indiatimes.com/2015-01-24/news/58408287_1_consultation-paper-viber-skype){rel="noopener noreferrer"}
a panel to look into "net neutrality from public policy objective, its
advantages and limitations," as well the impact of a "regulated telecom
services sector and unregulated content and applications sector". After
spending a few months collecting both oral and written testimony from a
number of players in this debate, and analysing it, on July 16 that
panel submitted its
[report](http://www.dot.gov.in/sites/default/files/u68/Net_Neutrality_Committee_report.pdf){rel="noopener noreferrer"}
to the DoT and released it to the public for comments (till August 15,
2015). At the same time, independently, the Telecom Regulatory Authority
of India (TRAI) is also considering the same set of issues. TRAI
received more than a million responses in response to its consultation
paper --- the most TRAI has ever received on any topic --- the vast
majority of them thanks in part to the great work of the [Save the
Internet](http://www.savetheinternet.in/){rel="noopener noreferrer"}
campaign. TRAI is yet to submit its recommendations to the DoT. Once
those recommendations are in, the DoT will have to take its call on how
to go ahead with these two sets of issues: regulation of certain
Internet-based communications services, and net neutrality.

## Summary of the DoT panel report

The DoT panel had the tough job of synthesising the feedback from dozens
of people and organizations. In this, they have done an acceptable job.
Although, in multiple places, the panel has wrongly summarised the
opinions of the "civil society" deponents: I was one of the deponents on
the day that civil society actors presented their oral submissions, so I
know. For instance, the panel report notes in 4.2.9.c that "According to
civil society, competing applications like voice OTT services were
eroding revenues of the government and the TSPs, creating security and
privacy concerns, causing direct as well as indirect losses." I do not
recall that being the main thrust of any civil society participant's
submission before the panel. That having been said, one might still
legitimately claim that none of these or other mistakes (which include
errors like "emergency" instead of "emergence", "Tim Burners Lee"
instead of "Tim Berners-Lee", etc.) are such that they have radically
altered the report's analysis or recommendations.

The report makes some very important points that are worth noting, which
can be broken into two broad headings:

## On governmental regulation of OTTs

- Internet-based (i.e., over-the-top, or "OTT") communications services
  (like WhatsApp, Viber, and the like) are currently taking advantage of
  "regulatory arbitrage": meaning that the regulations that apply to
  non-IP communications services and IP communications services are
  different. Under the current "unified licence" regime, WhatsApp,
  Viber, and other such services don't have to get a licence from the
  government, don't have to abide by anti-spam Do-Not-Disturb
  regulations, do not have to share any part of their revenue with the
  government, do not have to abide by national security terms in the
  licence, and in general are treated differently from other telecom
  services. The report wishes to bring these within a licensing regime.

- The report distinguishes between Internet-based voice calls (voice
  over IP, or VoIP) and messaging services, and doesn't wish to
  interfere with the latter. It also distinguishes between domestic and
  international VoIP calls, and believes only the former need
  regulation. It is unclear on what bases these distinctions are made.

- OTT "application services" do not need special telecom-oriented
  regulation.

- There should a separation in regulatory terms between the network
  layer and the service layer. While this doesn't mean much in the
  short-term for Net neutrality, it will be very important in the
  long-term for ICT regulation, and is very welcome.

## On net neutrality

- The core principles of Net neutrality --- which are undefined in the
  report, though definitions proposed in submissions they've received
  are quoted --- should be adhered to. In the long-run, these should
  find place in a new law, but for the time being they can be enforced
  through the licence agreement between the DoT and telecom providers.

- On the contentious issue of zero-rating, a process that involves both
  ex-ante and ex-post regulation is envisaged to prevent harmful
  zero-rating, while allowing beneficial zero-rating. Further, the
  report notes that the supposed altruistic or "public interest" motives
  of the zero-rating scheme do not matter if they result in harm to
  competition, distort consumer markets, violate the core tenets of Net
  neutrality, or unduly benefit an Internet "gatekeeper".

## Where does the DoT panel report go wrong?

- The proposal by the DoT panel of a licensing regime for VoIP services
  is a terrible idea. It would presumptively hold all licence
  non-holders to be unlawful, and that should not be the case. While it
  is in India's national interest to want to hold VoIP services to
  account if they do not follow legitimate regulations, it is far better
  to do this through ex-post regulations rather than an ex-ante
  licensing scheme. A licensing scheme would benefit Indian VoIP
  companies (including services like Hike, which Airtel has invested in)
  over foreign companies like Viber. The report also doesn't say how one
  would distinguish between OTT communication services and OTT
  application services, when many apps such as food ordering apps
  include text chat facilities. Further, VoIP need not be provided by a
  company: I run my own XMPP servers, which is a protocol used for both
  text and video/voice. Will a licensing regime force me to become a
  licence-holder or will it set a high bar? The DoT panel report doesn't
  say. Will there be a revenue-sharing mechanism, as is currently the
  case under the Unified Licence? If so, how will it be calculated in
  case of services like WhatsApp? These questions too find no answer in
  the report. All in all, this part of the report's analysis is found to
  be sadly wanting.

- Many important terms are left undefined, and many distinctions that
  the report draws are left unexplained. For instance, it is unclear on
  what regulatory basis the report distinguishes between domestic and
  international VoIP calls --- which is an unenforceable (not to mention
  unimportant for regulation) distinction --- or between regulation of
  messaging services and VoIP services, or what precisely they mean by
  "application-agnostic" and "application-specific" network management
  (since different scholars on this issue mean different things when
  they say "application").

## What does the DoT panel report mean for consumers?

- Not too much currently, since the DoT panel report is still just a set
  of recommendations by an expert body based on (invited) public
  consultations.

- Does it uphold Net neutrality? The DoT panel report is clear that they
  strongly endorse the "core principles of Net neutrality". On the issue
  of "zero-rating", the panel proposes some sound measures, saying that
  there should be a two-part mechanism for ensuring that harmful
  zero-rating doesn't go through: First, telecom services need to submit
  zero-rating tariff proposals to an expert body constituted by DoT; and
  second consumers will be able to complain about the harmful usage of
  zero-rating by any service provider, which may result in a fine. What
  constitutes harm / violation of Net neutrality? The panel suggests
  that any tariff scheme that may harm competition, distorts the
  consumer market, or violates the core principles of Net neutrality is
  harmful. This makes sense.

- Will it increase cost of access to WhatsApp and Viber? Well, one the
  one hand, zero-rating of those services could decrease the cost of
  access to WhatsApp and Viber, but that might not be allowed if the DoT
  panel recommendations are accepted, since that would possibly be
  judged to harm competition and distort the consumer markets. The DoT
  panel has also recommended bringing such services within a licensing
  framework to bridge the "regulatory arbitrage" that they are able to
  benefit from (meaning that these services don't have to abide by many
  regulations that a telecom provider has to follow). Whether this will
  lead to WhatsApp and similar services charging depends on what kinds
  of regulations are placed on them, and if any costs are imposed on
  them. If the government decides to take the approach they took to ISPs
  in the late 90s (essentially, charging them Re. 1 as the licence fee),
  doesn't impose any revenue sharing (as they currently require of all
  telecom services), etc., then there needn't be any overly burdensome
  costs that WhatsApp-like services will need to pass on to consumers.

## What misunderstandings do people have?

- There are multiple news reports that the DoT panel has recommended
  increased charges for domestic VoIP calls. This is untrue. The DoT
  panel's recommendations are about "regulatory arbitrage" and
  licensing, which need not be related to cost.

- There is a fear that the exception from net neutrality of "managed
  services and enterprise services" is a "loophole". If one goes by the
  examples that the panel cites of such services (intranet services an
  ISP provides for a private company, etc.), this fear seems largely
  misplaced.

- The DoT panel has given the go-ahead for all forms of zero-rating.
  Once again, this is untrue. The panel cites instances of zero-rating
  that aren't discriminatory, violative of Net neutrality and don't harm
  competition or distort consumer markets (such as zero-rating of all
  Internet traffic for a limited time period). Then it goes on to state
  that the regulator should not allow zero-rating that violates the core
  principles of Net neutrality.

What's missing in the Net neutrality debate is nuance. It's become a
debate in which you are either for Net neutrality or against it.
However, none of the underlying components of Net neutrality --- a
complex mix of competition policy, innovation policy, the right to
freedom of expression, etc. --- are absolutes; therefore, it is clear
that Net neutrality cannot be an absolute either.

Disclaimer: The information, ideas or opinions appearing in this article
are those of the author and do not reflect the views of Policywonks.in.
Policywonks.in does not assume any responsibility or liability for the
same. If the article carries photographs or images, we do not vouch for
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