SMS scrubbing: The failure rate was over 25 percent among the leading private and public sector banks
Several services such as net banking, credit card payments, e-commerce services, Aadhaar authentication, and even Co-WIN registrations were disrupted on Monday as SMSes and OTPs failed to arrive after telecom companies implemented a new set of regulations for commercial text messages, according to a report in Economic Times.
Out of one billion average daily commercial SMS deliveries, around 40 percent of traffic was disrupted till Monday evening. The failure rate was over 25 percent among the leading private and public sector banks.
Officials at payments companies and banks, among others, blamed telcos for faulty implementation of the new system to check spam messages.
However, operators blamed the companies and the governments for poor adoption, saying they had failed to register sender IDs and content on the blockchain platforms of telcos, which in turn triggered the high failure rate.
The Indian Banks' Association reached out to both the Trai and RBI, seeking an immediate postponement of the regulation. But an official at Trai said constant reminders were sent to banks regarding the impending deadline for the past 15 days. “We haven’t received any official complaint about any disruption,” the official said.
Cellular Operators Association of India said that due process has been followed to address the issue of unsolicited commercial communication. “TSPs have sent various communications to the principal entities (on whose behalf messages are sent) to register their content template with the telcos before March 7,” said SP Kochhar, director general, COAI.
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