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Peeling Paint, Website Bug: Ringing Bell's ₹251 Phone In A Storm Of Controversies Day After Launch

Paint Peels Off ₹251 Phone To Expose Logo Of Real Maker Day After Launch
Livemint

It's been less than 36 hours since the launch of a phone, being marketed as the world's cheapest at ₹251, but the Ringing Bell company's Freedom 251 smartphone is already facing a storm of controversies.

It started on an off note after Manohar Parrikar, India's defence minister, did not show up at the event hosted to launch the phone. The details given out about the phone's specs were nothing if not vague. A Hindustan Times report suggested that when asked the policy behind the pricing of the phone, Ashok Chadha, an official from the company, said the real cost of the device was ₹2500, which will be recovered through a raft of measures like economies of scale, innovative marketing, reduction in duties and creating an e-commerce marketplace.

Pranav Dixit, Tech editor for the Hindustan Times also said in a Reddit AMA that he has received a letter from the Indian Cellular Association (ICA), written to telecom minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, that estimates that the phone should cost at least USD 60 (Approx. ₹4100).

The phones handed over to the press all have an Adcom logo hidden behind a coat of white paint that easily peeled off. A report from Gadgets 360 suggested that phones handed out as review units were not the final products which will be shipped. That raises the question that who is building the final product? The report also says that Ringing Bells has not been registered at BIS, making their devices unsafe to use.

And we unveil the name of the real manufacturer of the #Freedom251 phone! pic.twitter.com/XWBdWFFOGm

— Vishal Mathur (@vishalmathur85) February 18, 2016

The Freedom251 website is a mess. Hardly anyone has been able to order the phone successfully. The website is ridden with bugs -- users who entered their details correctly and clicked on the 'Pay Now' button were redirected to the same page. There was no restriction on the quantity users could order as well. If you put 0.5 units as quantity, the price was halved.

Don’t have enough money for the Rs. 251 phone? Well, you can buy half of it. Even the shipping costs are halved! pic.twitter.com/cyMZbQfAwS

— Ershad Kaleebullah (@r3dash) February 18, 2016

The first look from Livemint said the phone has copied elements from the iPhone on hardware and software sides. The icons and software design is blatantly an iOS ripoff. The build seemed pretty flimsy. But if you're selling a phone for ₹251 that can be forgiven.

The website has put up a page saying that servers are overloaded and they will be back in 24 hours.

Meanwhile, a lot of local stores are scamming people by taking ₹251 in advance for the phone.

Heights of scamming, A new scam emerged of another #Freedom251pic.twitter.com/77ZtZTyobV

— Yatin Chawla (@YatinChawla) February 18, 2016

Some of the users even reached the Ringing Bells office to protest.

Peopl at Noida's Ringing Bells- a mobile maker's office, protesting for failing to book R251 smartphone. @htTweetspic.twitter.com/3knIchAnEl

— vinod rajput (@vinodrajputs) February 18, 2016

HuffPost India has reached out to the company for comments.

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This article exists as part of the online archive for HuffPost India, which closed in 2020. Some features are no longer enabled. If you have questions or concerns about this article, please contact indiasupport@huffpost.com.