Categories: Tech & Society

New rules on unsolicited information bugging you? “Let’s Trai talking it out”, Telecom watchdog chief advises

The head of Telecom Regulatory Authority of India has promised to look into the new influx of rules that govern unsolicited messages as telecom operators raise objections to them. RS Sharma, who will continue in his role for another two years as head of TRAI, said to PTI that “there may be a communication gap between what regulations say and what the operators understand.There could be some implementation issues, so we will discuss with them and see where the problem lies.

The new norms that had been implemented by TRAI had originally raised the ire of the Cellular Operator’s Association of India, who claimed that the regulations were “complex, time-consuming and devoid of a cost-benefit analysis.” The COAI, which includes Vodafone, Reliance Jio and Airtel as some of its members, had also raised objections to the blocking of mobile apps earlier this year, arguing that the restrictions impinge on their freedoms of speech, expression and information.

Sharma now intends to sit down with the operators to canvass their concerns as well as balancing their rights over the serious issue of unwanted and unsolicited messages being transmitted.

Mega Telecom Merger: Airtel and Vodafone Join Towers

The new rules will have blockchain as their underlying technology and will allow customers to revoke permission as to the incoming of certain messages. Consumers can also choose time-windows by which to receive unsolicited information. Operators are also expected to comply with the new regulations within 18 months.

Indian operators are notorious for the use of unsolicited messages sent to unassuming customers and everyone in India has had experience with overly-intrusive spam messaging. In 2017, one operator alone resulted in 31 million spam messages, according to Bloomberg News.

Trai on the other hand is the telecom industry watchdog that was established in 1997 to address India’s growing telecoms market. Earlier this month, Trai had locked heads with Apple over the latter’s refusal to allow consumers a feature that would block pesky calls though the issue was later resolved when the American tech-giant eventually relented and allowed for an app extension that customers could use to register spam calls.

Arjun Harindranath

Arjun studied law and philosophy before travelling to Europe in 2008 to be a full-time writer and journalist. He's eager to catalogue the thousands of startup stories India has to offer as well as bringing his insight into recent developments within the tech space.

Recent Posts

Delhi Public School students earn MIT-Certified AI credentials, record 50% jump in proficiency

High school students at Delhi Public School (DPS) earned MIT-certified AI credentials and improved their…

1 week ago

Summit AI’s Rural Cyber Blindside: Voice-Cloned Scams Exploding in India’s Digital Heartland

The recent India–AI Impact Summit 2026 demonstrated a defining global inflection point — the transition…

2 weeks ago

Account Aggregator is emerging as the foundation of India’s open finance architecture

By enabling secure, consent-based financial data sharing, the Account Aggregator framework is laying the groundwork…

2 weeks ago

ImmuneBridge wants to make cell therapy work for everyone – starting with the factory floor  

There’s a quiet crisis in one of medicine’s most exciting fields. Cell therapy – the…

2 weeks ago

How AI is Changing Business: Hybrid AI is Coming

Lenovo and NVIDIA are pushing AI into its next phase, scaling real-time, production-ready systems that…

3 weeks ago