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Ajit Mohan Appointed as Managing Director of Facebook’s Indian Operations
25 Sep, 2018 / 10:05 am / Reeny Joseph

Source: http://www.omnesmedia.com

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Facebook has hired the head of Indian video streaming service Hotstar to take on the newly-created role of managing director of its Indian operations, as the social media giant faces pressure to tackle fake news and store more data locally.

Ajit Mohan will take up the role of managing director and vice-president of Facebook India, the company’s biggest market by number of users, from early next year.

“India is one of the largest and most strategically important countries for Facebook,” Facebook’s Vice-President of Business and Marketing Partnerships, David Fischer, said in a statement. “Ajit’s depth of experience will help us to continue to have a positive impact in India across communities, organizations, businesses and with policy makers.”

Mohan has served as chief executive of Hotstar, a streaming platform owned by Twenty-First Century Fox’s Star India arm, since April 2016. Mohan’s move comes at a time Facebook is increasingly competing with video streaming services and TV channels for sports broadcasting rights.

Facebook, which began expanding into sports streaming in 2017, has the rights to stream Spanish soccer’s top division La Liga’s games in the Indian subcontinent over the next three seasons.

Mohan has overseen the streaming of Indian Premier League cricket on Hotstar, which set a new global benchmark with 8.26 million concurrent viewers logging onto the platform for the final of the league this year. He also takes over the top job at Facebook India at a turbulent time for the U.S. company.

The company also plans to oppose new legislation in India that would require it to store user data in the country. It last month appointed a grievance officer for Indian users based out of its headquarters in Menlo Park, California, like other global tech firms whose grievance officers sit outside of India. India has, however, said it will toughen up its tech laws including pushing U.S. tech giants to have their grievance officers in India.