Turakhia, who is co-founder of the USD 1.4-billion Directi Group, claimed that internet telephony in India is "under threat from major telecom players".
"Incumbent providers like Vodafone, Airtel, Idea, etc are reluctant to reduce costs and drive innovation. Allegedly, incumbent operators are claiming that only the telecom carrier that provides a data connection to a subscriber should be allowed to offer internet telephony to that subscriber over their internet connection," he said in a statement.
"Internet telephony enables customers to make calls at 1/3rd the current calling rates and provides numerous benefits such as the ability to make calls over Wi-Fi in bad signal areas, 90 per cent cheaper international calling, HD voice, and innovations like simultaneous data transmission, video calls, and many more," he said.
He added that the comments made by incumbents in response to a TRAI paper "make inaccurate claims and representations".
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Sudhir Singh from iSPIRT said the government should remove all "shackles".
"Leaving internet telephony only to the incumbent large telcos will not be in the interest of consumer. Regulator should fit in the entry of number of small and medium size players, also. This will help innovation, micro and small businesses and availability of variety of niche services," he added.
In his first brush with the telcos last year, Turakhia had launched a service -- Ringo -- which allowed users to make domestic calls at 19 paise a minute.
The service was then suspended after Bharti Airtel Chairman Sunil Mittal commented that apps like Ringo were "gaming the system" to hurt operators.
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