India Place Of Big Ambitions, Facebook Committed To It: Zuckerberg
NEW DELHI: Seeing exponential growth potential for Facebook in India, its co-founder Mark Zuckerberg said he will discuss with Prime Minister Narendra Modi ways to connect villages with the digital world.
The CEO of the California-headquartered firm, who is on his first visit to India, said he is excited to help the government in its ambitious Digital India programme.
"India is an amazing country with unlimited potential. It is a place of big ambitions and Facebook is deeply committed to the country. We see lot of growth for us here. Tomorrow I'm meeting the Prime Minister. He is committed to connecting villages online and we are excited to see how Facebook can help," Zuckerberg said in New Delhi.
Zuckerberg, who is on a two-day visit to New Delhi, also launched the global Internet project called internet.org in the country. Globally announced in August last year, the project seeks to bring Internet connectivity to the two-thirds of the global population that is not connected. The founding members of internet.org are Facebook, Ericsson, MediaTek, Nokia, Opera, Qualcomm and Samsung.
Internet.org is also influenced by Open Compute Project, an industry-wide initiative that has lowered the costs of cloud computing by making hardware designs more efficient and innovative.
India has about 243 million Internet users and have 100 million plus Facebook users, but there are over a billion people in the country who do not have access to the net, he added. He is the third high profile CEO of a U.S.-based firm, after Amazon's Jeff Bezos and Micrsoft's Satya Nadella, to visit India in last few days.
Zuckerberg said Facebook is creating a $1 million fund to help developers develop apps for farmers, migrants and women. This will be a contest to drive new apps and services in local languages.
"Since 2007, Facebook has been working on new apps and services in local languages. About 65 per cent use Facebook in a language other than English, including 10 Indian languages," he added.
On barriers in Internet penetration, he said: "There are three major barriers to connectivity network, affordability and content."
Zuckerberg, counted among the youngest tech billionaires, said free basic internet access should be like dialing 911 in the U.S. or 100 in India.
Technology has to serve the society, he said adding that connectivity cannot be a privilege of the rich and powerful.
"When the benefits of technology are shared across the whole society, that is when we can make the big leap. Because India has embraced science, the next generation has the opportunity to bring the world to India and India to the world," he added.
He said that the whole world being robbed of creativity and ideas because so many people in India are not online.
Also Read: Install Windows10 Technical Preview In 6 Simple Steps