City
Epaper

Need right regulatory guardrails to foster innovation while preserving fairness: Jyotiraditya Scindia

By IANS | Updated: February 25, 2026 18:50 IST

New Delhi, Feb 25 As new technologies redefine the communications landscape, it is essential that we put in ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Feb 25 As new technologies redefine the communications landscape, it is essential that we put in place the right regulatory guardrails to foster innovation while preserving fairness, transparency and public interest, Communications Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia said on Wednesday.

Congratulating the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) on its 29th Foundation Day, the minister underscored its role as a bedrock institution ensuring fairness, equity, and a level playing field across India’s communications ecosystem.

He also highlighted the rapid evolution from 4G to 5G, the advent of 6G and Artificial Intelligence, appreciating the fact that a technical discussion on network slicing was included in the technical discourse of the day.

TRAI Chairman Anil Kumar Lahoti reflected on the Authority’s role as a regulatory institution ensuring a level playing field and orderly growth across India’s telecom and broadcasting sectors.

He highlighted how connectivity today spans fixed line, mobile, optical fibre and satellite networks, enabling services across the country.

"Technologies such as Artificial Intelligence, 5G, and future 6G networks are redefining network architecture and service delivery. As these systems evolve, it is essential that our regulatory frameworks remain adaptive and transparent, ensuring fairness, accountability and the protection of consumer interest while enabling innovation," he stated.

TRAI Secretary Atul Kumar Chaudhary recalled the establishment of the Authority in 1997 during India’s transition to a competitive telecom market, highlighting the importance of an independent regulator in ensuring fair play, orderly growth and protection of consumer interests.

The Authority commemorated ‘TRAI Day 2026’, marking 29 years of the establishment of the TRAI on February 20, 1997. The celebration combined reflections of outstanding work done by TRAI in shaping the Telecommunication and broadcasting landscape in all these years.

Chaudhary underscored the continued relevance of television as a widely accessible medium, particularly in rural and semi-urban regions, and emphasised that universal access to broadcasting remains integral to social inclusion.

He also noted the rapid evolution of telecom technologies, including network slicing, and stressed the need to preserve openness and adhere to the principles of net neutrality as advanced capabilities are deployed.

Members also reflected on TRAI’s evolving regulatory philosophy and its institutional role in steering India’s communications ecosystem through successive technological transitions.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

BusinessKurt Campbell calls India-US ties ‘most important’

BusinessIndia-US ties face stress test amid global shocks

National3 FIRs filed over misleading social media posts on Char Dham Yatra; monitoring stepped up

CricketIPL 2026 Points Table: Updated Standings After Mumbai Indians vs Chennai Super Kings Match

InternationalKurt Campbell calls India-US ties ‘most important’

Business Realted Stories

BusinessRam Madhav flags strain in India-US ties

BusinessSkills, policy reforms key to India’s growth push

BusinessIndia’s moment as supply chains shift: Biswal

BusinessMulti-factor authentication and Zero Trust vital for secure data access: Experts

BusinessSitharaman holds meeting with banks on emerging threats linked to AI models, asks them to take measures to secure IT systems, safeguard customer data