Facebook recently announced a partnership with cell providers in developing nations like Indonesia, Pakistan, and the Philippines to provide free access to Facebook and a few other services.
Users have been unintentionally paid by their mobile carriers for accessing Facebook’s “free” services, according to a recent article from the Wall Street Journal.
Free Basics was a service offered by Meta Connectivity, formerly known as Facebook Connectivity that was supposed to provide “free access to communication tools, health information, education resources, and other low-bandwidth services.”
Meta Connectivity has been in existence since 2013 and currently covers over 300 million people as of October 2022. However, according to a Wall Street Journal internal analysis, Facebook had known for months that users were being charged to utilize the Free Basics services. The problems were referred to as ‘leakages’ by Facebook because they happened when paid and free services began to overlap.
Pakistani Users Were Robbed The Most
Because most people in underdeveloped nations utilize prepaid phone plans, they are often unaware that they are being charged for utilizing mobile data until they run out of money.
According to the Wall Street Journal, Facebook users in Pakistan have been charged the highest, totaling $1.9 million, and the problem has also impacted two dozen other countries.
Facebook’s software, User Interface (UI), and videos on the network appear to be the root of the problem. Videos are not intended to surface while using Free Basics, but faults in Facebook’s software allowed a couple to show up. Due to the difficulties, notifications informing users that they will be charged for watching the videos did not display.
Facebook “Fixed” The Issue
According to the Wall Street Journal, Facebook was aware that videos were responsible for 83 percent of the extra charges on mobile data. Facebook claims to have resolved the problem.
Drew Pusateri, a representative for Meta, said in a statement to The Verge:
“We tell people that viewing photos and videos will result in data charges when they sign up, and we do our best to remind people that viewing them may result in data charges.
The issue identified in the internal report that affected some of those reminders has largely been addressed. We’ll continue to work with our partners to meet our obligations to these users and ensure accurate and transparent data charges.”
According to the Wall Street Journal, Facebook’s recent growth has primarily come from low-connectivity countries, while it has remained static in developed countries.
Facebook has implemented its Wi-Fi services and debuted Facebook Discover in low-connectivity countries, acting as both a social media platform and an internet provider.
Facebook Discover, like Free Basics, gives users a daily quota of free bandwidth. In 2016, certain nations, including India, blocked Facebook’s Free Basics program, saying that it violated net neutrality principles.
To read our blog on “Meta to launch one of the world’s most powerful supercomputers to process its data,” click here.