Anand Mahindra said he was considering funding a social media startup to rival Facebook.

Highlights Facebook in huge row over firm that harvested user data without consent

Mahindra Group chairman considers seed funding alternate social network

Mahindra Group has a prominent IT division called Tech Mahindra

Beginning to wonder if it’s time to consider having our own social networking company that is very widely owned&professionally managed&willingly regulated.Any relevant Indian start-ups out there?If any young teams have such plans I’d like to see if I can assist with seed capital pic.twitter.com/nBSkQk0hCp - anand mahindra (@anandmahindra) March 26, 2018

Wonderful idea my good friend @anandmahindra. Fervently hope to see you taking the lead. https://t.co/6pXps0o9AE - Ravi Shankar Prasad (@rsprasad) March 27, 2018

Thank you all for the flood of responses, suggestions & proposals. Please copy your tweets to my colleague @j_bindra who will work with me on this exploration. If nothing else, it should be fun... https://t.co/U0DfzPlLEH - anand mahindra (@anandmahindra) March 27, 2018

Billionaire businessman Anand Mahindra has an idea that the reigning social media giant may not be a huge fan of. As the controversy over the Facebook-Cambridge Analytical scandal continued to grab headlines, spiralling into a growing political row and spur worries about privacy and safety of personal data in India, Mr Mahindra took to Twitter to muse whether it was time to build an alternative social media platform. Among those who liked his idea was a union minister."Beginning to wonder if it's time to consider having our own social networking company that is very widely owned&professionally managed&willingly regulated.Any relevant Indian start-ups out there?If any young teams have such plans I'd like to see if I can assist with seed capital (sic)," The 62-year-old Chairman of the Mahindra Group, famous for its SUVs and software solutions, tweeted on Monday.Under the tweet, he attached the cover of the latest The Economist magazine on the Facebook fiasco.His tweet created quite a bit of buzz on Tuesday morning, drawing approvals and suggestions. Among those who wished him well for the way was India's IT minister Ravi Shankar Prasad, who had last week issued a sharp warning to Facebook.Bombarded with tweets, Anand Mahindra responded later in the day:This is not the first time that Mr Mahindra has weighed in on projects that interest him. Just last month, at the peak of the Nirav Modi scandal, the entrepreneur had aired an idea about crowdfunding an iconic building in Mumbai , that had been acquired by the fugitive jeweller, and turn it into a music hub.