Sponsored or zero-rated access
A provider can exempt approved gateway traffic from a user’s data allowance or fund a restricted access bundle.
The model does not take over routers or bypass billing systems. Each participating organisation chooses the technical route, capacity, locations, support domains, security controls and funding arrangement.
A provider can exempt approved gateway traffic from a user’s data allowance or fund a restricted access bundle.
A host can broadcast an isolated guest network that reaches only the gateway and authorised external services.
An organisation can host support packs locally and use internet access only for updates or controlled synchronisation.
| Area | Required control | Evidence for a pilot |
|---|---|---|
| Network separation | No route from support users into household, staff or operational devices. | Independent segmentation and penetration-test report. |
| Capacity protection | Paying users and essential host services retain priority. | Bandwidth policies, congestion tests and visible limits. |
| Privacy | Collect only the minimum information needed for access and support. | Data map, retention schedule and privacy impact assessment. |
| Content boundaries | Only approved support domains, packs and external services are reachable. | Allow-list, change-control record and review process. |
| Abuse handling | Clear, proportionate response without turning the network into mass surveillance. | Incident process, escalation route and audit trail. |
| Funding | The user is not unexpectedly charged. | Written funding and billing treatment. |
This form does not send information anywhere. It saves a draft on this device and downloads a reviewable JSON file when submitted.
Use the file as a structured starting point for a provider, council, charity, library, housing organisation or community venue conversation.
Kyzel Kreates™ is interested in hearing from organisations able to test, fund, review or responsibly deliver a controlled public-benefit pilot.
Councils, schools, colleges, libraries, charities, community organisations and digital-inclusion programmes.
Broadband providers, mobile network providers, device manufacturers and responsible technology companies.
Universities, researchers, safeguarding specialists, accessibility experts, disability organisations and responsible funders.
No implied endorsement: no organisation should be shown as a partner, supporter or participant until there is written evidence and permission to make that statement publicly.