I&B Ministry
Security clearance axed, provisional MSOs to get 10-year licences in due course
NEW DELHI: The Home Ministry has officially informed the Information and Broadcasting (I&B) Ministry that it will not insist on security clearance for multi system operators (MSOs) for digital addressable television for cable television.
Confirming the same to Indiantelevision.com, a senior I&B Ministry source also informed that the practice of giving provisional licences to some MSOs will continue.
A new list on 20 August said that a total of 372 MSOs had been issued licences, of which 146 were provisional licences. The rest 226 had ten-year licences.
Explaining the rationale behind this, the source said that the aim was to check the veracity of MSOs, which had been given provisional licence.
The source added that every one of these MSOs would get ten-year licences like the others if nothing adverse was found against them.
I&B Ministry
Govt opens OTT financial bids to formalise digital ad partnerships
Move brings streaming platforms into structured, data-led outreach ecosystem
NEW DELHI: The government has opened financial bids for the empanelment of OTT platforms, marking a significant step in bringing streaming services into a more structured advertising framework.
The process, led by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting through its arm, the Central Bureau of Communication, is part of a broader push to modernise how public campaigns are distributed in an increasingly digital-first media landscape.
According to an official advisory, the financial bids were scheduled to be opened on April 8, 2026, at Soochna Bhawan in New Delhi. The move follows earlier consultations and signals that the empanelment exercise is progressing as planned.
At its core, the initiative aims to bring OTT platforms into the same organised ecosystem that governs government advertising across television, print and digital media. With streaming platforms rapidly gaining traction, especially among younger and urban audiences, the shift reflects a clear pivot towards high-engagement channels.
The empanelment framework introduces a rate discovery mechanism, where the lowest bids will help set benchmark pricing for advertising across platforms. These rates will apply to multiple ad formats, including pre-roll videos and homepage placements, ensuring consistency in how campaigns are priced and executed.
To maintain accountability, participating platforms will be required to meet defined performance standards, including minimum view-through rates for video ads, third-party measurement compliance and detailed reporting for audits. The guidelines also draw a line between original OTT services and aggregators, allowing only platforms with significant ownership or exclusive rights over content to qualify.
This development builds on the government’s Digital Advertisement Policy introduced in 2023, which has steadily expanded to include newer digital channels. By formally onboarding OTT platforms, the government is looking to sharpen both reach and measurement in its communication strategy.
For streaming companies, the opportunity opens the door to a consistent stream of government advertising, though within tightly defined pricing structures. For policymakers, it is another step towards aligning outreach with changing media consumption habits.
As the bids are evaluated, the spotlight now shifts to which platforms make the cut and how competitively they have priced their inventory, decisions that could shape the future of government advertising on OTT for years to come.






