This Indian carrier shows Facebook how to give free Internet to users

Idea plans to give first-time users access to an unlimited Internet, but for a short period of time.
 By 
Sonam Joshi
 on 
This Indian carrier shows Facebook how to give free Internet to users
Indian consumers check their mobile telephones at a free Wi-Fi Internet zone in Mumbai. Credit: INDRANIL MUKHERJEE/AFP/Getty Images

A few months after India banned Facebook's Free Basics platform for violating net neutrality, Indian carrier Idea has launched an "Internet For All" program that gives away one month of free access to non-Internet users. While Free Basics promised free access to a limited Internet, Idea's model gives free access the entire Internet for a limited period of time.

Under the new program, Idea prepaid subscribers and retailers can log on to the carrier's website from their smartphones to gift non-Internet users 100MB of free data for a month. The person who sends the gift will also get a credit of 100MB of data from Idea. The carrier will periodically send information on how non-Internet users can use the free data. 

“Internet adoption today is being shaped predominantly through the use of mobile telephony. However, currently only 25% of India’s population are connected to the internet," Sashi Shankar, Chief Marketing Officer at Idea said. "Accelerating mobile internet adoption is huge task and requires larger participation."


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With a projected 402 million Internet users, India has the world's second-largest online user base. Yet, this pales in relation to the fact that only a third of the country's 1.2 billion people have Internet access. Idea, which currently has 175 million subscribers, says that its pan-India operations cover 880 million people. 

Idea's Internet access program does what Facebook's Free Basics failed to do.

With this, Idea's Internet access program does what Facebook's Free Basics failed to do: give limited but free access to the entire Internet rather than unlimited access to a restricted number of websites and services chosen by and including Facebook. 

While Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg maintained that it was "not sustainable to offer the whole Internet for free", Idea is proposing a different model of introducing people to the Internet and then letting them decide if they would like to continue to stay connected.

Idea is also trying to ensure that its scheme is only availed by first-time Internet users. Facebook's claim of connecting the unconnected was also found to be questionable after an investigation had revealed that Free Basics was being used by consumers who already had a data plan and used it to access Facebook for free, instead of first-time Internet users.

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Sonam Joshi

Sonam Joshi was Mashable's principal correspondent in India. She has previously worked for The Times of India group and Time Out Delhi, and written for The Caravan, Mint Lounge and Yahoo Originals.

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