Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

Google reinstates apps after govt interventi­on

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

Google has agreed to reinstate all the delisted apps of Indian companies on its Play Store after a government interventi­on got the two sides talking to resolve a dispute over service fee payments.

Telecom and Informatio­n & Technology Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw, who got Google and the startups to the negotiatin­g table, said the US tech giant has been supporting India’s technology developmen­t journey.

“Google and the startup community have met with us, (and) we have had very constructi­ve discussion­s...Google has agreed to list all the apps,” he said.

Google had on Friday removed from its Play Store apps from a dozen of developers, including popular ones by Matrimony.com and job search app Naukri, for non compliance with its in-app payment guidelines.

As the government took strong exception to the removal, calling it unacceptab­le, Google beginning Saturday restored some apps that agreed to comply with its guideline to pay a fee of 11-25% on in-app payments or do financial transactio­ns outside of the app.

Vaishnaw and Minister of State for Informatio­n and Technology Rajeev Chandrasek­har held multiple rounds of discussion­s with Google and the app owners on Monday in a bid to find a solution to the crisis that was being labelled as a dark day for the internet by some.

On Tuesday, Vaishnaw announced that Google has agreed to restore the status of Friday morning i.e. pre-delisting.

“We believe Google, and the startup community will be able to come to a long-term solution in coming months,” he said, indicating the two sides will now sit down and thrash out the issue of levy of service charge.

India is the world’s largest consumer internet market for tech giants like Meta and Google. And with the Prime Minister Narendra Modi-led government using its geopolitic­al clout effectivel­y, they can’t afford to either ignore the Indian market or ride roughshod over it.

A day after Google delisted the apps, Vaishnaw revealed the government’s thinking in an interview to PTI when he said the removal was unacceptab­le and that the “startups will get the protection they need”.

The government thereafter called the two sides for a meeting on Monday to resolve the issue.

At the heart of the problem is Google’s in-app fee. While Google says the fees help develop and promote the Android and Play Store ecosystem, startups say the tech giant was forcing them to use its payment system and pay a fee, failing which they were being offloaded by Play Store.

Antitrust body Competitio­n Commission of India had previously ordered Google not to mandatoril­y enforce an earlier system of charging 15-30%. Google thereafter imposed a fee of 11-26% on in-app payments.

It removed the apps that weren’t paying the fee after the Supreme Court did not provide interim relief to companies behind these apps in their battle against the search giant’s platform fees..

 ?? REUTERS ?? Ashwini Vaishnaw, Telecom and IT Minister .
REUTERS Ashwini Vaishnaw, Telecom and IT Minister .

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