Nikhil Pahwa

Nikhil Pahwa is an Indian journalist, digital rights activist, and founder of MediaNama, a mobile and digital news portal.[1] He has been a key commentator on stories and debates around Indian digital media companies, censorship and Internet and mobile regulation in India. He is the founder of 'Save the Internet' (now the Internet Freedom Foundation) that was instrumental in successfully opposing Facebook's Free Basics programme in India on the basis that it limited competition and violated net neutrality.[2][3][4]

Nikhil Pahwa at Asia Liberty Forum 2019 in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

Pahwa was earlier an editor of ContentSutra, now a part of the Guardian Media Group.[5] He was named a TED fellow in 2016.[6]

Medianama

After working at ContentSutra for two years, Nikhil Pahwa founded MediaNama on 27 June 2008.[5] The portal provides news and analysis of the digital and telecom businesses of India.[7] It also monitors the digital policies set by the government of India.[8]

Activism

When the Indian government invited comments on net neutrality in 2014, Nikhil Pahwa was a notable activist in the debate which helped the government reach a decision in favour of net neutrality.[9] Later that year, when Facebook announced its plans of launching a service to provide free Internet access to selected sites and apps on the Internet, Pahwa was one of its most vocal critics and, being a "respected voice in the field", he was invited for a discussion with Facebook executives. In 2015, after Facebook nevertheless launched its Free Basics programme in partnership with Reliance Mobile, a major telecom company, the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) invited public comments on a ruling on net neutrality. Pahwa believed this to be a worrying development as TRAI's judgements tended to come down on the side of the phone companies. He believed that only a grassroots campaign would save net neutrality and contacted coders, lawyers, and policy wonks to form a movement dubbed, Save the Internet. A website, savetheinternet.in, was launched on 11 April which allowed visitors to easily make submissions to TRAI with their answers to the 20 questions posed by TRAI on net neutrality. The movement took off when a video by the comedy group, All India Bakchod, explaining net neutrality to the viewer directed the public to make their submissions via savetheinternet.in. By 24 April, 1.1 million Indians had e-mailed the regulator not to licence or sanction plans such as Free Basics that violated net neutrality.[4][10]

gollark: I do wonder how Palaiologos guessed mine.
gollark: I know, right?
gollark: I assumed 9 was made to look like you, but didn't want to give the possible impersonation points.
gollark: Since obviously you wouldn't actually check in your own git repository by *accident*.
gollark: As I said, I assumed you *deliberately* did that as a bluff.

See also

References

  1. Venugopal, Vasudha (6 June 2013). "File-sharing site blocking flags up internet freedom". The Hindu. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  2. Burgess, Matt. "A real-life David and Goliath: the Indian 'web warrior' who took on Facebook and won". Retrieved 13 October 2017.
  3. Helft, Miguel. "Meet The Man Who Derailed Facebook's Plan To Provide Free Internet In India". Forbes.
  4. Bhatia, Rahul (12 May 2016). "The inside story of Facebook's biggest setback | Rahul Bhatia". The Guardian.
  5. Schonfeld, Eric (5 October 2008). "Bad Karma At contentSutra. Site Sputters After Being Bought By The Guardian". TechCrunch. Retrieved 24 April 2015.
  6. "Meet the 2016 class of TED Fellows and Senior Fellows". TED Blog. 8 December 2015.
  7. "About Medianama". www.medianama.com. Retrieved 17 October 2017.
  8. Smartt, Ursula (2017). Media & Entertainment Law. Taylor & Francis. p. 109. ISBN 9781317334613.
  9. Mahurkar, Uday (2017). Marching with a Billion: Analysing Narendra Modi’s Government at Midterm. Random House Publishers India Pvt. Limited. p. 69. ISBN 9789386495846.
  10. Soni, Aayush (25 May 2015). "How people power took on big business in the fight for net neutrality in India". The Guardian. Retrieved 17 October 2017.


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