HomeNewsIndian Telcos Want Netflix, Hotstar to Remove HD Streaming Options Temporarily

Indian Telcos Want Netflix, Hotstar to Remove HD Streaming Options Temporarily

With stay-at-home work and social distancing becoming a way of life, streaming services like Netflix, Hotstar and others are seeing their traffic shoot up exponentially, and ISPs in India are not happy. Mobile service providers in the country have reportedly sought the intervention of the telecom department and the home ministry to force at least 12 major video streaming platforms, including Amazon, Netflix, YouTube and Hotstar, to reduce their video qualities to ease some of the pressure on the network infrastructure.

Speaking to ET, Rajan Mathews, the director general of telecom industry body, COAI, said: “We’ve written to DoT (Department of Telecommunications) and the home ministry that it’s absolutely essential for the video streaming service providers/broadcasters to cooperate with phone companies and manage their traffic distribution patterns to ensure they don’t strain telco network infrastructure…”.

According to ET, the carriers have called on the video streaming companies to not only temporarily migrate from HD to standard definition for their movies and serials, but even suspend video ads and pop-ups to ease network load. While some streaming platforms, like Netflix and MX Player, said they are already taking steps to reduce bandwidth consumption without compromising on the quality of streaming, there’s no word on what the others are doing to address the situation.

The demand from ISPs in India follows similar diktats from the EU, which last week ordered Netflix and YouTube to reduce their streaming quality in the region to ease the load on telecom infrastructure. According to German internet exchange company, DE-CIX, average data traffic at its main network node in Frankfurt increased more than 10 percent in recent weeks, including hitting a record 9.1 terabits per second data throughput, largely due to a 50 percent increase in video-conferencing traffic and a 25 percent increase in cloud-gaming and social media use.

SOURCE – The Economic Times

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