iWorld
Telcos may skip 5G spectrum auction due to high prices: Fitch Ratings
MUMBAI: Credit rating agency, Fitch Ratings, stated that India’s new National Digital Communication Policy (NDCP) could manage to benefit the telecom sector by making it easier to meet continuous rising data demand and focusing on tax and fee duty on the manufactory.
5G spectrum auctions could be skipped by the Indian telcos if prices are too high. The Indian telecommunication companies are likely to raise investment in 5G spectrum which directly depends on the 5G spectrum principal price. This can overextend the liabilities on balance sheets of these companies.
Furthermore, Fitch also explained how private telcos are going to benefit and enlarge their broadband coverage funded by the universal service obligation fund.
By initiating and creating two million Wi-Fi hotspots in rural areas and another one million in urban areas, the NDCP plans on connecting almost more than 600,000 villages to the digital network. Although, according to Fitch, there are going to be a few execution challenges but it will only lead to broadband adoption rate increasing and going higher.
The research report also stated that telco costs and red tape could be cut by the NDCP’s plans to review and rationalise the sector’s tax structure and optimise future spectrum asset pricing.
A Fitch statement read, “Indian telcos face heavy and multiple taxes – including licence fees, spectrum usage charges, and universal service fees on top of expensive spectrum assets. Meanwhile, intense competition has limited telcos’ pricing power. Overall, these pressures have stretched balance sheets”.
iWorld
WhatsApp may soon let users to pick who sees their status updates
The messaging giant is borrowing a page from Instagram’s playbook as it pushes to give users finer control over their social circles.
CALIFORNIA: WhatsApp is quietly working on a feature that could make its Status function considerably smarter and considerably more private.
According to reports from beta tracking platforms, the app is testing a tool called Status lists, which would allow users to create named groups such as close friends, family and colleagues, and control precisely which group sees each update. It is a meaningful step up from the platform’s current blunt instruments, which offer only three options: share with all contacts, exclude specific people, or manually select individuals each time.
The new feature draws an obvious comparison with Instagram’s Close Friends function, and the resemblance is unlikely to be accidental. Both platforms sit within Meta’s family, and the company has been nudging them toward a common logic of audience segmentation for some time.
The move also fits neatly into WhatsApp’s broader privacy push. The platform has been rolling out enhanced chat protections and is exploring the introduction of usernames, which would allow users to connect without exchanging phone numbers. Status lists extend that philosophy from messaging into broadcasting.
Meanwhile, Status itself has been evolving well beyond its origins as a simple photo-and-text slideshow. The feature now supports music stickers, collages, longer videos and interactive elements, pushing it closer to the social-media-style story format pioneered by Snapchat and refined by Instagram. In that context, finer audience controls are not merely a privacy feature. They are a precondition for people sharing more.
The feature remains in development and has not been confirmed for release. WhatsApp routinely tests tools that are later modified or quietly shelved. But the direction of travel is clear: the app wants Status to be a destination, not an afterthought. Letting users decide exactly who is in the audience is how it gets there.








