On June 23, 2021 Shri Ravi Shankar Prasad, Union Minister of Electronics & Information Technology, Communications, and Law and Justice, announced that the Department of Telecommunications (DoT) had issued modified guidelines for other service providers. The new guidelines were created to make sure that all service providers in India operate in an equitable and competitive environment. This was an initiative in the digital India line. Companies or businesses that offer secondary or tertiary services, such as telemarketing, telebanking, or telemedicine, to various other companies, such as banks, or hospitals, are referred to as “other service providers”. In this blog, we will go through the guidelines, which include changes in the registration of OSPs, interconnectivity between local and foreign OSPs, EBPAX guidelines, etc.
“Other Service Provider is an Indian company, registered under the Indian Companies Act, 2013 or an LLP registered under LLP Act, 2008 or a Partnership firm or an organization registered under the Shops and Establishment Act providing voice-based Business Process Outsourcing (BPO) services to their customers located worldwide including India.”
The mandatory registration for OSPs with the DoT has been repealed by the 2020 guidelines. So now no registration is required to establish OSP centers in India.
The OSPs are permitted to share infrastructure including EPABX and PSTN/PLMN lines of OSP Centers for office use only. OSPs were permitted to have a distributed architecture for their OSP centers across India as long as they own the EPABX. These OSP-owned EPABXs can now be installed at third-party data centers in India, and OSPs can use Telecom Service Providers such as EPABX services.
The Revised Guidelines now allow OSPs to use Electronic Private Automatic Branch Exchange (EPABX) in other countries. The Revised Guidelines do not make a distinction between domestic and international OSPs. This guideline is beneficial to businesses that are looking to use their international EBAPX for domestic operations in India.
In all the situations of CDRs/UDRs/ System logs etc., mentioned above should be maintained for a period of one year.
The OSPs should self-regulate their operation in such a way that there is no toll bypass and infringement on the jurisdiction of authorized OSPs. The new guidelines make it clear that there is no necessity to submit any files or any information on regular basis to the DoT or its field units. The DoT cannot perform any audits or examine the OSP centers on daily basis.
The COVID pandemic has caused a significant change in the way we operate. Companies all over the world are embracing remote work, which has drastically raised the demand for Other Service Providers (OSPs). Companies can set up and manage their remote working infrastructure with the help of OSPs, allowing employees to work anytime and from anywhere. The Department of Telecom (DoT) in India has issued guidelines for OSPs, making work from anywhere a possibility.
The changes implemented by the DoT through the New Guidelines is a very wise move. It not only provides clarification but also provides some relaxation on the restrictions placed on the OSP industry. The removal of the distinction between domestic and foreign OSPs will now allow multinational corporations to establish BPOs and contact centers in India while using their global EPABXs.
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