Free Basics Scrutiny
- All
- News
-
Facebook Free Basics Internet Service May Be Launched in the US
- Friday October 7, 2016
- Brian Fung, The Washington Post
Facebook is trying to determine how to roll out Free Basics in the US without triggering the regulatory scrutiny it faced in India earlier this year.
- www.gadgets360.com
-
Free Basics Vs Net Neutrality: Mark Zuckerberg Fuels Debate in India
- Tuesday December 29, 2015
- India News | Indo-Asian News Service
First splashy full page ads in major Indian newspapers and now a personal piece by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a leading English daily defending Free Basics, the war over "free" or "selective" internet services for the poor and net neutrality has entered a new phase.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Facebook Ready For Free Basics Scrutiny, Open For Twitter, Google
- Tuesday December 29, 2015
- World News | Press Trust of India
Countering allegations of gatekeeping in website selection on its free internet platform Free Basics, Facebook today said it is open to the scrutiny of the process by any third party agency like IAMAI or Nasscom.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Facebook Free Basics Internet Service May Be Launched in the US
- Friday October 7, 2016
- Brian Fung, The Washington Post
Facebook is trying to determine how to roll out Free Basics in the US without triggering the regulatory scrutiny it faced in India earlier this year.
- www.gadgets360.com
-
Free Basics Vs Net Neutrality: Mark Zuckerberg Fuels Debate in India
- Tuesday December 29, 2015
- India News | Indo-Asian News Service
First splashy full page ads in major Indian newspapers and now a personal piece by Facebook CEO Mark Zuckerberg in a leading English daily defending Free Basics, the war over "free" or "selective" internet services for the poor and net neutrality has entered a new phase.
- www.ndtv.com
-
Facebook Ready For Free Basics Scrutiny, Open For Twitter, Google
- Tuesday December 29, 2015
- World News | Press Trust of India
Countering allegations of gatekeeping in website selection on its free internet platform Free Basics, Facebook today said it is open to the scrutiny of the process by any third party agency like IAMAI or Nasscom.
- www.ndtv.com