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Showing posts from May, 2026

Telecom Data Centers Are Becoming the New Engine of Pakistan’s Digital Economy

 The internet does not live only in mobile towers and fiber lines. Behind every app, payment, video call, and cloud service, data centers are quietly doing the heavy lifting. Why Data Centers Matter for Telecom Data centers store, process, and manage digital information. Telecom companies need them for customer systems, billing, cloud platforms, network monitoring, enterprise services, and future 5G applications. Pakistan’s Cloud First Policy says cloud computing can reduce costs, improve responsiveness to citizens, increase transparency, optimize resources, and improve public service delivery. This makes data centers important not only for telecom companies, but also for government services, banks, hospitals, startups, and schools. PTA’s Critical Telecom Data and Infrastructure Security Regulations 2025 also mention secure hosting environments, including data centers, cloud platforms, and hybrid systems. The document also highlights network security, access controls, and data...

Telecom Consumer Complaints Show What Users Really Want From Operators

 A cheap package means little when the service does not work. For many Pakistani users, the real frustration starts after a problem occurs and nobody gives a clear answer. Why Telecom Complaints Matter Telecom complaints are not just routine customer service issues. They show where users face real pain. These complaints may include billing disputes, poor coverage, blocked SIMs, mobile registration issues, unwanted messages, internet quality, or service activation problems. PTA’s complaint section lists services such as complaint registration, complaint status, consumer awareness, analysis of consumer complaints, and action against fraudulent activities. PTA also provides a Complaint Management System where users can register and track complaints. This matters because telecom services are now part of daily survival. A student needs data for classes. A shopkeeper needs mobile banking. A delivery rider needs maps. A parent needs reliable calls during emergencies. Where Users Usua...

Submarine Cables Are Pakistan’s Hidden Internet Lifeline

 What happens under the sea can affect a video call in Lahore, a freelance project in Multan, or an online class in Quetta. Pakistan’s internet depends heavily on submarine cable systems that connect the country with the global web. Why Submarine Cables Matter Submarine cables carry international internet traffic between countries and continents. They are the quiet backbone behind cloud apps, online banking, streaming, social media, outsourcing work, and digital exports. Pakistan is connected through multiple international submarine cable systems. Submarine Networks lists systems such as AAE-1, IMEWE, PEACE, SMW4, SMW5, TW1, 2Africa, and SMW6 under Pakistan’s international cable connectivity profile. This matters because one cable fault can slow down millions of users. When international routes face disruption, users may see slow browsing, weak video calls, and delays in business communication. The New Capacity Race The global cable industry is expanding fast because data dem...

Fiber Backhaul Is the Quiet Reason Pakistan’s Mobile Internet Can Get Faster

 Most users talk about 4G and 5G, but few talk about the fiber lines behind mobile towers. Without strong fiber backhaul, even modern towers can struggle to deliver fast internet. Why Fiber Backhaul Matters A mobile tower does not work alone. It needs to send traffic from users to the wider internet through backhaul. That backhaul can use fiber, microwave, or other links. Fiber is usually more stable and capable of handling heavy data demand. Pakistan’s telecom data usage is rising fast. SAMENA Council’s summary of sector performance said telecom data usage reached 27,727 petabytes in 2025. It also reported that around 95 percent of cellular networks were 4G enabled and supported by 17.21 Tbps of international bandwidth. This means users are consuming more video, cloud apps, calls, social media, and business tools. Towers need stronger backhaul to keep up. Why 5G Needs More Fiber 5G is often marketed through speed, but speed depends on the full network chain. If the tower is ...

Telecom Taxes in Pakistan Are Making Digital Access Harder for Families

 Why does mobile internet feel expensive even when packages look cheap on paper? For many Pakistani users, the real issue is not only package pricing. It is the tax burden, device cost, and the pressure of staying connected every day. Why Telecom Taxes Matter for Ordinary Users Pakistan’s telecom sector is huge. PTA reported in 2025 that the country crossed 200 million telecom subscribers, with 150 million broadband users and over 2 million FTTH subscribers. That means telecom is no longer a luxury service. It is part of daily life for students, parents, workers, traders, and freelancers. GSMA has also highlighted the issue of mobile sector taxation in Pakistan, noting that combined taxes on mobile usage reach 33 percent, among the highest in the region. For a low income household, that number is not just a policy detail. It directly affects how much data a family can afford each month. The Hidden Cost of Staying Online In many cases, people do not calculate telecom cost as a ...

Telecom Infrastructure Sharing Could Lower Network Costs in Pakistan

  Why should four companies build four separate towers in the same area when one shared setup can serve users better? That is the question behind Pakistan’s push for telecom infrastructure sharing. What Infrastructure Sharing Means Telecom infrastructure sharing allows operators to share network assets. This can include towers, sites, poles, ducts, shelters, power systems, and in some cases active network elements. PTA says the approved Telecom Infrastructure Sharing Framework provides a regulatory mechanism for licensees to share active and passive telecom infrastructure in a fair and competitive way. The authority also says the framework can help reduce deployment and operating costs. For consumers, this can matter more than it sounds. Lower network costs may support wider coverage, faster rollout, and better services in areas where building new infrastructure is expensive. Why This Matters for 4G and 5G Pakistan needs more telecom capacity. Data use keeps rising, and futur...