How Next-Gen Smartphone Users are Being Bought and Sold
After facebook and google, Twitter became the latest to buy millions of Indian smartphone users in July.
This article by Rohin Dharmakumar was published by Forbes India Magazine on August 13, 2013, and later mirrored in IBN Live on August 19, 2013. Sunil Abraham is quoted.
Now, the actual announcement was about how Twitter had partnered with  Vodafone India to offer its services ‘free of cost’ to mobile  subscribers for three months. It had already inked similar deals with  Airtel and Reliance, according to Medianama, a digital media news site.  Google and Facebook, too, announced such agreements during the past  year, whereby mobile subscribers could use their service ‘free of cost’  through their phones.
Nothing is really ‘free’ on the web, which  is why we have the adage: “If you’re not paying for it, you are the  product”. So these large web companies are actually buying millions of  first-time mobile internet users by paying off their respective mobile  operators. Of India’s 137 million internet users, roughly 120 million  access mobile internet. 
Sunil Abraham, director of the Centre  for Internet & Society in Bangalore, thinks India could be going  down the Indonesia route. “If you ask the average Indonesian mobile user  if he or she has internet access, they might say no. Ask them if they  have Facebook or Twitter, and they’ll say yes!” Incidentally, 96 percent  of Indonesians use social media, mostly from their phones. 
Smaller  competitors to Facebook, Google and Twitter who can’t afford to pay  mobile operators on similar terms will find their competitiveness  shrinking. Meanwhile, a large number of Indians will balk at paying for  internet usage on their phones because the social networks are all  ‘free’.

