The Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (Trai) today proposed radical changes to the existing billing patterns of SMS, value-added services, short-duration calls and premium-rate services. |
In its consultation paper on billing issues, Trai proposed that subscribers pay the prescribed SMS charges only after the message is delivered. |
The paper called upon service providers to build mechanisms to reject any SMS to an invalid number, as this would help reduce the incidence of non-delivery of messages and also ensure that subscribers were not charged for a service not availed of. An alternative floated by the paper is: charge an SMS in two parts "� when it is sent successfully and when it is received. |
On short-duration calls, the regulator noted that as high as 3 per cent of these calls dropped, resulting in subscribers being charged at flat rates for "no fault of theirs, but owing to the inefficiency of the network". |
The regulator's proposals to address this issue included per-second billing and zero or nominal charge for small-duration calls. |
"In India, considering the present network condition, the scope for drop calls immediately after the call matures, is higher. It seems that a practical alternative will be that calls up to 2-5 seconds duration may not be charged," Trai said. |
Another option is that, if a call is cut, and if the same number is redialled, then the operator refund up to a minute of chargeable time. |
Trai also said that the clocks of different operators were not synchronised with a reference national clock, resulting in wrong billing in cases where tariff plan rates were based on the time of the day. |
"It is proposed to discuss the issues with service providers and the telecom engineering centre, so that a common standard clock is identified for everyone," the paper said. |
The regulator also said it was examining other issues such as charging for value-added services and premium-rate services, where the responsibility of informing the operator that these services were not required remained with the subscriber. |
Trai also said it was considering complaints that operators were not intimating their customers on their credit limits. |
"On these issues, the authority proposes to issue suitable instructions and directives within a fortnight," the paper said. |
With an objective to bringing about standardisation and transparency in the procedures being followed by various operators, the paper also presented a code of practice for billing accuracy in India, with benchmarks for metering and billing. |
The regulator sought comments, proposed changes on these benchmarks and wanted to know if the regime needed to be based on self-testing and reporting to Trai, or, implemented through approval bodies. |
Trai invited responses from stakeholders on the issues raised by the consultation paper by the month-end. |