Categories
Close
Menu
Menu
Close
Search
Search

Featured Articles

RSS
123

Opinion Articles

Opinion

India caps mobile text messages

Mark

Share:

Print

Rate article:

No rating
Rate this article:
No rating

Anjana Pasricha from voanews.com writes:

India’s millions of mobile phone subscribers have won relief from a growing nuisance on the subcontinent - unsolicited text messages. The crackdown by regulators targets the world’s fastest-growing mobile phone market.

From remote villages to crowded metros, the number of mobile phones in India has grown exponentially to more than 850 million in just over a decade.

Constant texts
But the communication revolution has a downside. Telemarketing companies used the gigantic base of subscribers to bombard potential customers with scores of text messages, selling everything from chocolates to credit cards, real estate to weight loss programs.

The unsolicited messages arrived anytime - early morning, at midday, on weekends, sometimes even at midnight.

In New Delhi, Renuka Taimni, 57, says it was a huge “headache.”

“They clog your inbox and you spend so much time just deleting them," she complains. "They arrive at odd hours, sometimes even in the middle of the night I wake up with a jerk and say God what is that sound and see some odd message in my inbox about some real estate God knows where and some health club.”

Consumer relief
The pesky messages stopped coming earlier this week after India’s telecommunications regulator capped the number of messages that can be sent from a mobile phone at 100 per day. Some exemptions have been made, such as social networking sites, e-ticketing services and banks. Phone subscribers can dial a toll free number to block commercial calls and register on a “do not disturb” list.

Telecom analyst Mahesh Uppal calls it a significant step to curb the telemarketing practice. But he says there are still ways that the nuisance could continue.

“Those who don’t know about the DND, because it is not as widely publicized as it should be, those people will continue to get the stuff," Uppal says. "Plus those telemarketing players, who are small and informal, they will obviously escape through the net.”

Well received
This is the second effort by Indian authorities to put an end to the harassment of mobile phone subscribers by telemarketers. In 2007, it started a national “do not call” list, and imposed penalties on companies that called people who had registered. The number of calls was reduced - but the number of messages went up exponentially.

The latest crackdown on unsolicited texts has been welcomed by millions like college professor Nandini Guha.

“It’s a big relief, it is so nice not to be disturbed at the oddest time,” admits Guha.

India is the world’s fastest growing mobile phone market and second biggest in the world after China. Some of the lowest calling rates in the world have put mobile phones in the hands of millions of low income workers in the country.

Originally published on voanews.com

Comments

Collapse Expand Comments (0)
You don't have permission to post comments.

Recent Podcasts

ExclusivePodcast - 20th July 2011

This week's podcast takes a look at Everything Everywhere's departing CEO, Vodafone's security concerns, ZTE's own-brand phones, HTC's legal worries and Sony Ericsson's results. As usual, the programme is hosted by Iain Graham with James Rosewell and Mark Bridge.

ExclusivePodcast - 15th July 2011

As 'voicemail hacking' news stories continue, Iain Graham talks to mobile industry crime-fighter Jack Wraith. Jack discusses mobile phone security from his position as head of the Telecommunications UK Fraud Forum and the Mobile Industry Crime Action Forum.

ExclusivePodcast - 13th July 2011

We're talking about the EC's new roaming proposition, eBay's latest mobile payment purchase, Three's partnership with Ovi and all the other top mobile industry news stories in this week's podcast.

ExclusivePodcast - 8th July 2011

Neelie Kroes, European Commission Vice President for the Digital Agenda, announces the EC's new plans to cut the cost of roaming from next year. Mobile phone calls, text messages and data charges will all be given maximum limits - and new 'roaming only' tariffs could also be introduced.

ExclusivePodcast - 6th July 2011

We're talking about Nortel patents, Google Plus, roaming charges and health concerns in this week's mobile industry podcast... but that's not all. We also discuss mobile payments, security, gambling, apps and the Pope's first Tweet.

RSS
First4950515254565758Last

Follow thefonecast.com

Archive Calendar

«June 2026»
MonTueWedThuFriSatSun
25262728293031
1234567
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
293012345

Archive