Business Standard

Google moves high court against CCI on report leak

- NEHA ALAWADHI

Google has filed a writ petition with the Delhi High Court against the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) following the alleged leak of a confidenti­al report that relates to the competitio­n regulator’s ongoing investigat­ion into the dominance of the search engine’s Android operating system.

On September 18, a confidenti­al interim fact-finding report submitted by the CCI director general’s office to the Competitio­n Commission of India (CCI) relating to an ongoing investigat­ion into Google’s Android smartphone agreements was leaked to the press, the technology giant has said.

Google has not yet received or reviewed this confidenti­al report.

The news story being referred to said the DG’S report found the American search and tech giant “guilty of adopting anti-competitiv­e, unfair and restrictiv­e trade practices in the mobile operating system and related markets”.

On Thursday, Google filed the writ petition seeking redress in this matter, specifical­ly protesting the breach of confidence, which impairs Google’s ability to defend itself and harms its and its partners.

“We are deeply concerned that the Director General’s Report, which contains our confidenti­al informatio­n in an ongoing case, was leaked to the media while in the CCI’S custody.

Protecting confidenti­al informatio­n is fundamenta­l to any government­al investigat­ion, and we are pursuing our legal right to seek redress and prevent any further unlawful disclosure­s. We cooperated fully and maintained confidenti­ality throughout the investigat­ive process, and we hope and expect the same level of confidenti­ality from the institutio­ns we engage with,” said a Google spokespers­on.

The case pertains to an investigat­ion the CCI started in 2019 against Google for allegedly abusing its dominant position to force app makers to exclusivel­y use its billing system for in-app purchases and bundling the search giant’s payments app with Android smartphone­s sold in India.

The report also called Play Store policies “one-sided, ambiguous, vague, biased and arbitrary”, while Android continued to enjoy its dominant position among operating systems for smartphone­s and tablets since 2011.

There has been a growing chorus against some of Google Play Store’s practices among India’s developers. Things came to a head last year when Google said it would charge a 30 per cent commission on inapp purchases and developers would have to use only Google’s payment gateway.

In March this year, Google Play revised that policy and said it would slash its 30 per cent billing fee to 15 per cent for developers globally when they made the first $1 million of their annual revenue. However, many developers were still unhappy.

In 2018, the European Commission fined Google 4.34 billion euros ($5 billion) for breaching the European Union’s antitrust rules. Earlier this month, South Korea’s antitrust regulator fined Google $177 million for allegedly throttling competitio­n by using its dominant position in the mobile operating system segment.

In June this year, the CCI launched another antitrust probe against Google over the alleged dominance of its Android Operating System in the Smart TV market in India.

 ?? ?? Android is the OS on 97-98% Indian smartphone­s
Android is the OS on 97-98% Indian smartphone­s

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