Incidentally, Hike is run by Kavin Mittal, son of telecom czar Sunil Mittal, and is a joint venture between Bharti Enterprises and Japan's Softbank Corp.
Bharti group also runs the country's top mobile operator Bharti Airtel, which incidentally has been very critical of those offering free voice-over-internet calls and other such services, known in the telecom parlance as 'Over The Top (OTT)' players.
"We believe that its not as big a threat as the market is making it out to be," Hike messenger founder and CEO Kavin Bharti Mittal told PTI in an interview.
Hike has announced launch of free voice calling feature on its platform at a time when mobile operators are demanding that OTT players like Hike, WhatsApp, Line, Skype among others should be brought under regulation.
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OTT players use VoIP, or Voice over Internet Protocol, to let their users make free calls. Telecom regulator, TRAI has begun a pre-consultation process regarding OTT players and is likely to come out with a draft paper soon.
Kavin said that globally also, where there are 4G networks and high-end 3G networks, people are still buying voice minutes.
"Talks of cannibalisation happened during messaging too and look where it has come, its not really has a big impact, so we believe that same thing will happen for voice," he added.
"We believe that for services like Hike and YouTube and so forth, people actually buy data plans. If we did not exist, people would not buy data. So, on one hand we are driving a new source of revenue for telcos," he said.
Kavin said with the launch of voice calls on Hike, in the first 12 hours, over half a million calls were being made.
The company has optimised the technology for Hike and people can make 4-5 minutes of calling per MB on 2G.
"2G voice quality is comparable to what you get in telecom network and 3G and wi-fi quality is much better than what you normally get on a telecom network. So, you can say that 3G and wi-fi is like HD calling and 2G as normal calling," he said.