Account
holders of Skype in India will not be able to use the Internet phone
service to make calls to local landlines or mobile phones as Microsoft
Corp., which owns Skype, will stop supporting such calls from early next
month.
"As of November 10, 2014 Skype will end support for calling within
India, meaning calls to mobiles and landlines from Skype within India
will no longer be available," Microsoft said, in a brief statement that
didn’t provide a reason for the move.
Voice over Internet Protocol, or VoIP, calls that transmit sound as
data makes phone calls cheap with services such as Skype, or Google
Voice, which is also not available in India.
Such calls to a landline or a mobile phone network “have always been
against regulations in India...this is probably a move by Microsoft to
align themselves with the regulations,” Jayanth Kolla, a partner with
Convergence Catalyst, a telecommunications consultancy in Bangalore,
told International Business Times in a phone interview.
This move will also not have any impact on Skype's revenues in India,
which would come more from people in India calling numbers overseas
using their Skype accounts, Kolla said.
Telecom providers in India have made huge investments in their
services, and barring VoIP calls could be one way the Indian regulator
would safeguard those investments, Kolla said. More than 85 percent of
the revenues of India’s phone utilities still come from voice calls, he
said.
Microsoft added in its statement: "Users in India can still make free
Skype-to-Skype calls worldwide, international calls to mobiles and
landlines and users outside the country can call mobiles and landlines
in India. Skype WiFi and SMS messages are also available to users in
India."
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