Internet in Bangladesh

Like many developed and developing countries, the Internet in Bangladesh has witnessed significant growth. Although facing many constraints in expanding Internet access and use, development of the Internet and Information Technology are high government priorities. In April, 2019 Internet users in Bangladesh increased to 93.702 million.[1] On 19 February 2018, Bangladesh started the 4G network service.

Evolution

Starting in the early 1990s, Bangladesh had dialup access to e-mail using the Bulletin Board Systems (BBSs) of a few local providers, but the number of users did not total more than 500. Users were charged by the kilobyte and email was transferred from the BBS service providers to the rest of the world by international dialup using UUCP.

In June 1996 the first VSAT base data circuit in the country was commissioned and the Bangladesh Telegraph and Telephone Board (BTTB) granted licenses to two Internet Service Providers (ISPs). In subsequent years more liberal government policies led to a rapid expansion of the industry, resulting in over 180 registered ISP's by 2005. ISPs are currently regulated by the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) through the Bangladesh Telecommunications Act.[2]

In May 2006 Bangladesh inaugurated new submarine cable optic fiber connectivity as part of the 16 country consortium SEA-ME-WE 4 project. The landing station is in Cox's Bazar, the southern city near the Bay of Bengal. In July 2008 the Submarine Cable Project was transformed into the company Bangladesh Submarine Cable Company Limited (BSCCL), which is now responsible for all services related to the submarine cable.[3]

Usage

The number of Internet subscriptions in Bangladesh grew from 186,000 in 2000 to 617,300 in 2009.[4] However, only 0.4% of the population used the Internet in 2009 giving Bangladesh one of the lowest usage percentages in the world, ahead of only North Korea, Myanmar, and Sierra Leone.[5] This limited Internet penetration is due to many factors, including: unavailability in rural areas, high costs, little local content, limited or poor service quality, lack of infrastructure with the last mile often limited to dial-up, too many providers competing in a relatively small market, and low literacy rates.[6] By 2011 however, the number of Internet users in Bangladesh had seen phenomenal growth of over 900% bringing the total number of users to 5,501,609 (3.5% of the total population) mainly due to wide availability of mobile Internet access.[7]

In April 2010, Akhtaruzzaman Manju, president of Internet Service Providers' Association of Bangladesh, said "we've estimated that nearly 10 million people in the country are using 800,000 Internet connections on sharing basis", adding the number of Internet users in the country is increasing roughly 15-16 percent a year.[8] "This increased Internet penetration will result in a 2.6 per cent contribution to the country’s GDP by 2020, while creating 129 thousand more jobs by the same year" the research added.[9]

The main obstacle to using the Internet in Bangladesh is its distribution. The Internet is still an urban privilege because telephone connections are more concentrated in urban areas, particularly in and around Dhaka. Mobile operators are providing substantial services in and outside urban areas using 3G/EDGE or WiMax.

However, recently Bangladesh has seen phenomenal growth in Internet usage. Due to government various initiatives known as a2i project (open Hotspot zone, government offices with internet facility, Reduce bandwidth price etc.) have impacted the growth of users.[10] As of April 2019, internet subscribers have reached 93.702 million users.[1]

Service quality

While the Internet speed in Bangladesh may not be among the fastest in the world, it has significantly improved in the recent past.[11] As of July 2015, Bangladesh ranked 90th out of 198 countries on the Household Download Index by Net Index.[12] Specially, the completion of the Kuakata submarine cable (Regional Submarine Telecommunications Project, Bangladesh) of BSCCL has added significant amount of transmission capacity (through SEA-ME-WE 5 Cable) and provided redundancy and low-latency with PoP to PoP connectivity.

Since starting of the Cox's Bazar submarine cable (through the SEA-ME-WE 4 cable) in 2006, the country has seen the Internet bandwidth price to drop significantly. In 2008, the Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC) slashed wholesale Internet bandwidth prices drastically, from BDT 80,000 (approximately US$1,125) per Mbit/s to BDT 18,000 (approximately US$250) per Mbit/s. In 2009, after complaints that retail prices were still too high for slow, unreliable connections, the BTRC indicated that they were going to begin monitoring ISPs to ensure that retail prices reflected the reduced wholesale prices. Inside the capital city, the retail price has been reduced and quality of Internet has become standardized significantly through the optical fiber internet providers. However, Internet connectivity with acceptable quality and reliability is still relatively costly for outside of Dhaka.[11]

The government sees information and communication technologies (ICTs) as a key driver of socioeconomic development. This is reflected in the government's "Digital Bangladesh" plan as well as the National Information and Communication Technology Policy.[11] Bangladesh is slowly moving up in the worldwide ICT rankings, rising from 130th in 2009 to 113th in 2012 in the "networked readiness index". But, while its ITC ranking has improved, Bangladesh still lags behind other low-income countries of its stature. Progress is limited due to deficiencies in the regulatory framework and infrastructure development.[13][14] And ICT leaders are concerned that the annual budget does not support the government's ICT goals.[15]

Internet services

National Internet Exchanges (NIXs) and International Internet Gateways (IIGs)

All ISPs and equivalent service providers in Bangladesh exchange traffic via two systems, the National Internet Exchange (NIX) and International Internet Gateways (IIGs).[16][17] The IIGs provide global Internet connectivity, while all domestic Internet traffic is routed via the NIX to minimize usage of international bandwidth.[18] The NIX consists of two exchange points known as the Bangladesh Internet Exchange (BDIX) established in August 2004 and operated by the Sustainable Development Networking Programme and the Peering Society of Bangladesh[19] and the Bangladesh Society of Internet Exchange (BSIX) established in May 2004.[20] In June 2012 the BTRC announced plans to issue an unrestricted number of additional NIX licenses.[21] There are two IIGs in service operated by, Mango Teleservices Limited[22] and the government owned Bangladesh Telecommunications Company Limited (BTCL).[23]

There are concerns that, with a limited number of NIX operators, only two IIG operators, and with BSCCL holding a monopoly as the only operator of the SEA-ME-WE fiber optic cables, limited competition will keep the cost of raw bandwidth high.[24][25][26]

In 2012, Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Authority has awarded additional 35 International Internet Gateways (IIGs). In 2014, one additional NIX license has been awarded to a NovoCom limited, a private limited company.[27]

Internet Service Providers (ISPs)

In 2005 there were more than 180 ISPs operating in the country.[2] ISP's are regulated by the BTRC. In 2016, there were 119 licensed ISPs providing services nationwide[28] and 65 ISPs providing services in the central zone.[29]

Internet Service Providers Association of Bangladesh (ISPAB) is an association for all the internet service providing organizations in Bangladesh. It’s formed by a committee of some of the most notable industry decision makers to represent the Internet industry by providing information and services on various key areas such as seeking Govt.’s help/attention, defining legal framework to protect the industry, expanding Bangladesh’s market, providing education on websites and internet usage, etc. ISPAB is a non-profit organization which prides itself in making profits for distribution to its members.[30]

Mobile operators

Because fixed line penetration rates are and are expected to remain low, most Bangladeshis' first experience with the Internet is likely to be via mobile services. An estimated 90% of Bangladesh's Internet users got their access using mobile services in 2010.[6] Out of the Four mobile operators, Teletalk, Grameenphone, Robi, & Banglalink offer 3G, 4G services in 64 districts of Bangladesh, others offer 3G, 4G Internet service on some specific areas and EDGE or GPRS GSM Internet service on rest of the areas. Operators are working on expanding their 3G, 4G services on all areas. The sole CDMA operator, Citycell, used to offer EVDO before it was shut down by the government in 2016. Airtel Bangladesh merged with Robi.[31][32]

Broadband

Broadband Internet and e-commerce in Bangladesh is slowly progressing. In 2009 there were 50,000 fixed broadband Internet subscribers.[33] However, In March 2016 there are currently 3.112 million ISP/PSTN users.[34] According to BTRC data, there were 5.735 million broadband connections in November 2018.[35] Though broadband Internet access is available, the charges for high speed connections are higher than in other south Asian countries, though this is changing. In Bangladesh Broadband is legally defined as 128/128 kbit/s, which is not in line with the ITU's definition and many broadband Internet services may not be considered true broadband internationally.[36]

WiMAX

Three companies, BanglaLion Communications Ltd., Brac Bdmail Network Ltd., and Augere Wireless Broadband Bangladesh Ltd., won licenses to operate WiMAX in Bangladesh in September 2008.[37] The three firms purchased the licenses at auction for 2.15 billion BDT (US$31 million) from the BTRC under an agreement that pays 27.50% of revenue to the government. Brac Bdmail declined to start the service.[38] BanglaLion and Augere (branded as Qubee) launched commercial WiMax services by the end of 2009.[39][40]

Cyber cafés and Local Service Providers (LSPs)

Expensive and slow connections available from individual homes has created a demand for cyber cafés with higher than average bandwidth. The number of cyber cafés was estimated to be roughly 800 in 2009, unchanged from 2005.[41] Cyber cafés were first regulated by the BTRC in 2009, but fewer than 150 had obtained the required license by the end of 2011.[42][43]

Internet censorship and surveillance

The OpenNet Initiative found little or no evidence of filtering in 2011.[44][45]

By 2020 a very large list of websites ranging from gaming websites to pornographic websites to gambling websites to social websites like Reddit are blocked in Bangladesh and the list is increasing each and every day.

Although Internet access in Bangladesh is not restricted by a national level filtering regime, the state has intervened to block Web sites for hosting anti-Islamic content and content deemed subversive. Internet content is regulated by existing legal frameworks that restrict material deemed defamatory or offensive, as well as content that might challenge law and order.[45]

The Bangla blogging platform Sachalayatan was reported to be inaccessible on 15 July 2008, and was forced to migrate to a new IP address. Although the blocking was not officially confirmed, Sachalayatan was likely Bangladesh's inaugural filtering event. YouTube was blocked for a few days in March 2009 in order to protect the "national interest". The disputed video covered a partial audio recording of a meeting between the prime minister and military officials, who were angry at the government's handling of a mutiny by border guards in Dhaka that left more than seventy people dead.[46]

Facebook was blocked by the BTRC for 7 days starting on 29 May 2010 because of "obnoxious images", including depictions of Mohammed and several of the country's political officials as well as links to pornographic sites.[47] The block was lifted after Facebook agreed to remove the offensive content.[48] During the same period a 30-year-old man was arrested in the Bangladeshi capital on charges of uploading satiric images of some political leaders on Facebook.[49]

The BTRC again blocked YouTube access in September 2012 after Google, Inc. ignored requests to remove the controversial film, Innocence of Muslims, from the site.[50][51]

On 16 May 2013 BTRC asked the international internet gateway operators to reduce the upload bandwidth of ISPs by 75% in an effort to prevent illegal VoIP.[52] There is speculation that the bandwidth reduction is actually an effort to make it difficult for people to upload ‘problematic’ videos, images, TV talk show clips, etc. in the social media.[53]

In November and December 2015, the government blocked Facebook and other social media, for a period of twenty-two days. The purpose was to quell militant violence and opposition unrest as reactions to a death penalty to two opposition leaders, Salahuddin Quader Chowdhury and Ali Ahsan Mujahid, for war crimes committed in the 1971 independence war.[54]

In 2019,[55][56] and continuing into 2020,[56] the government -- citing "violence" and "security" issues, and the need to preserve "order" -- has limited or blocked internet access to-and-from the Rohingya refugee camps around Cox's Bazar, particularly following organized protests and boycotts by Rohingya there, opposing the government's handling of their crisis.[55] The communications blockade continued into 2020,[56] despite objections from the Rohingya community and its global disapora,[55][57] and from human rights and aid organizations,[56][58] and the United Nations,[56][59], who have complained that the blackout -- by limiting essential and urgent communications -- increases the refugees' vulnerability to crime,[55] and to the COVID-19 pandemic.[56][58][59]

Internet top-level domain

The top-level domain for Bangladesh is '.bd' and '.বাংলা' .

gollark: Write or I will open a portal to the plane of infinite bees, thus crushing everything on the surface of the planet under the weight of increasingly large quantities of bees.
gollark: Write, or I will plunge the Earth into the Sun.
gollark: The first case was recorded December 1 or something.
gollark: I really hate typing on phones. I can do 100 WPM or so on a decent physical keyboard, but on phones I type very slowly and rely heavily on autocorrect.
gollark: Write the book, or *pay the price of failure*.

See also

References

  1. "Internet Subscribers in Bangladesh - April 2019". Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission. April 2019.
  2. "A short history of the Bangladesh ISP Industry" Archived 19 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine, Internet Service Providers Association Bangladesh, accessed 27 September 2011
  3. "BSCCL website"
  4. "Internet users", World Bank, accessed 27 September 2011
  5. "Internet users (per 100 people)", The World Bank
  6. Bangladesh Telecoms Sector: Challenges & Opportunities, Ifty Islam, Asian Tiger Capital Research, November 2010
  7. "Internet World Stats", Source: ITU
  8. "Roundup: Internet use on rise in Bangladesh" Archived 3 May 2010 at the Wayback Machine, iStockAnalyst, 29 April 2010
  9. "Internet subscribers may reach 18.3m by 2020: The Financial Express, 22 January 2010", Bangladesh ICT Insight, 26 January 2010
  10. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 11 August 2017. Retrieved 4 February 2015.CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link)
  11. "Internet in Bangladesh". Country report: Bangladesh. OpenNet Initiative. 6 August 2012.
  12. "Household Download Index". Net Index by Ookla. Archived from the original on 8 July 2015. Retrieved 13 November 2016.
  13. "Bangladesh moving slowly up in ICT: Analysts say weak regulatory regimes cast a blight on the sector", Abdullah Mamun, The Daily Star, 12 August 2012
  14. Rizanuzzaman Laskar (22 July 2007). "BTTB fails to reap benefit from submarine cable, Officials say they lack infrastructure to offer public the benefit of this fast and efficient facility". Daily Star.
  15. Jamal Uddin (4 May 2012). "Leaders of ICT sector unhappy with budget". The Financial Express.
  16. "International Long Distance Telecommunications Services (ILDTS) Policy-2007" (PDF). Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC). Archived from the original (PDF) on 30 December 2008. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
  17. "IGW, ICX and IIG". Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC). Archived from the original on 8 August 2012. Retrieved 29 August 2012.
  18. "Telecoms Infrastructure" Archived 4 September 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Board of Investment, Prime Minister's Office, Bangladesh
  19. "Internet Exchange Directory: Bangladesh Internet Exchange", Packet Clearing House, Retrieved 10 September 2012
  20. "Bangladesh Society of Internet Exchange", Packet Clearing House, Retrieved 10 September 2012
  21. "NIX guideline okayed", Jamal Uddin, Financial Express, 28 June 2012
  22. Mango Teleservices Limited, accessed 27 September 2011
  23. Bangladesh Telecommunications Company Limited (BTCL), accessed 27 September 2011
  24. Sunil Tagare (9 May 2012). "Bangladesh to Remain a Monopoly Forever". Sunil Tagare's personal views on the Telecom industry.
  25. Sunil Tagare (29 April 2012). "Who will Regulate the Regulators?". Sunil Tagare's personal views on the Telecom industry.
  26. "BSCCL's Facebook post about its own monopoly power".
  27. "List of Licensees". Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Authority.
  28. "List of national ISPs" (PDF). Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC). 11 April 2016. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2016. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
  29. "List of central zone ISPs" (PDF). Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission (BTRC). 21 March 2016. Archived (PDF) from the original on 11 May 2016. Retrieved 11 May 2016.
  30. https://ispab.org/
  31. Jamal Uddin (29 July 2012). "GP denied chance of 3G test run". The Financial Express.
  32. Jamal Uddin (12 July 2012). "Teletalk to enter 3G era in Sept". The Financial Express.
  33. "Fixed broadband Internet subscribers: Bangladesh 2009", World Bank, accessed 27 September 2011
  34. http://bdnews24.com/business/2016/04/18/internet-users-in-bangladesh-cross-60-million-says-telecoms-regulator
  35. "BTRC shuts 3G, 4G again". The Daily Star. 30 December 2018. Retrieved 31 December 2018.
  36. "Birth of Broadband - Frequently Asked Questions", International Telecommunication Union, September 2003
  37. "3 Companies won WiMAX Licenses in Bangladesh", Hasibul Islam's Blog, 25 September 2008
  38. "BRAC's BDmail Network Declines Wimax Licence in Bangladesh", Inside Bauani's Mind, 16 November 2008
  39. "BanglaLion to Start WiMAX Service in Bangladesh from 1st June", WiMAXian, 29 March 2009
  40. "Wimax in Bangladesh" Archived 26 March 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Muhibbul Muktadir Tanim on WiMAX360, 22 December 2009
  41. "", Md Hasan, The Daily Star, 9 July 2009
  42. "Cyber Cafe" Archived 8 August 2012 at the Wayback Machine, Bangladesh Telecommunication Regulatory Commission, retrieved 10 September 2012
  43. "Most of cyber cafes run sans licences", Mehdi Musharraf Bhuiyan, Financial Express, 2 February 2012
  44. Open Network Initiative Summarized global Internet filtering data spreadsheet, 8 November 2011
  45. "Bangladesh Country Profile", OpenNet Initiative, 6 August 2012
  46. "ONI Regional Overview: Asia", OpenNet Initiative, June 2009
  47. "Pakistan Lifts Facebook Ban; Bangladesh Cracks Down", Rebekah Heacock, OpenNet Initiative, 1 June 2010
  48. "Bangladesh unblocks Facebook after Muhammad row", BBC News, 6 June 2010
  49. "Facebook blocked", Daily Star (Bangladesh), 30 May 2010
  50. "Google ignores request of BD Government about Youube". Make Google My homepage.
  51. "YouTube may return in Dec: BTRC" Archived 15 February 2013 at Archive.today, Shamim Ahamed, bdnews24.com, 3 Nov 2012
  52. "BTRC cuts upload bandwidth", bdnews24.com, 17 May 2013
  53. "Reduction of internet speed is digital tyranny", Shafquat Rabbee, opinion, bdnews24.com, 18 May 2013
  54. "Bangladesh death sentences lead to Facebook ban". BBC News. 18 November 2015.
  55. "Bangladesh Blocks Internet Services in Rohingya Refugee Camps," September 3, 2019 Reuters News Service / New York Times, retrieved April, 2020; (same topic, September 10, 2020, at The Daily Star (Bangladesh) retrieved April, 2020
  56. Jackson, Miriam, "UN, Rights Watchdog Want Internet Restored at Rohingya Camps," March 28, 2020, Union Journal, retrieved April 2020
  57. Sirazul Islam (Youth Advocate for the British Rohingya Community UK),"A Rohingya Coronavirus Catastrophe Looms if Their Internet Blackout Continues: Leaving the group cut off from the outside world leaves them especially vulnerable to COVID-19," March 27, 2020, The Diplomat (Japan), retrieved April, 2020
  58. "Bangladesh Internet Ban Risks Rohingya Lives," March 26, 2020, Human Rights Watch, retrieved April, 2020
  59. "Press briefing note on Myanmar-Bangladesh, Rohingya," April 17, 2020, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, United Nations, on ReliefWeb.int, retrieved April, 2020
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