Sony, JioStar reject TRAI plan to regulate FAST
Sony and JioStar are reportedly pushing back against a proposal from the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) to regulate FAST (Free Ad-supported Streaming TV) services under telecom licensing rules. The companies argue that applying telecom regulations to FAST platforms would violate constitutional protections for content providers.
Key Takeaways
- Sony and JioStar are challenging TRAI’s proposal to regulate FAST services under telecom licensing rules.
- Their submissions argue that FAST platforms are content providers, not telecom services.
- The companies say telecom licensing rules would violate constitutional protections for content providers.
- The article identifies the filing as part of TRAI’s FAST regulatory push in India.
Why It Matters
The immediate issue is whether FAST will be treated like a telecom service or left under a content-centric framework. Sony and JioStar are drawing a legal line around how free ad-supported streaming TV should be classified, with their filings explicitly citing constitutional protections. That matters across the streaming stack because classification affects which regulatory regime applies to FAST providers. What to watch next is TRAI’s response to these submissions and whether its final framework keeps FAST inside telecom licensing rules or not.
Read full article at exchange4media.com