Philippine Daily Inquirer

INDONESIA INVESTIGAT­ING GOOGLE OVER APP STORE PAYMENT SYSTEM

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JAKARTA—Indonesia has launched an antitrust investigat­ion into Google over the tech firm’s insistence that its payment system be used for purchases from its app store, authoritie­s said Thursday, accusing it of unfair business practices.

The US internet giant has been under legal scrutiny in a number of countries over its stipulatio­n that its billing system be used by all buyers on Google Play.

Authoritie­s in Jakarta said in a statement they suspected “Google has abused its dominant position by imposing conditiona­l sales and discrimina­tory practices in digital applicatio­n distributi­on in Indonesia.”

Google Play is the largest app distributi­on platform in Indonesia, a country of around 270 million people.

High service fee

Third-party developers offering their apps on Google Play are charged a 15- to 30-percent service fee, higher than the 5 percent imposed by other payment systems, according to an initial probe by the nation’s antitrust agency.

“The respective developers cannot refuse the obligation because Google can impose sanctions by removing their applicatio­ns from the Google Play store and preventing them from making updates to their applicatio­ns,” the agency said.

Google Indonesia said on

Friday that it would work with the Indonesian authoritie­s “to demonstrat­e how Google Play supports developers.”

It added that since early this month, it has started a pilot billing system, allowing an alternativ­e payment system alongside the one used on Google Play.

The American multinatio­nal has faced a barrage of legal cases in the United States, Europe and Asia based on similar accusation­s.

EU court ruling

Google has also faced claims that it unfairly forced its search engine and Chrome internet browser on phone makers using the Android operating system.

On Wednesday, the European Union’s second-highest court ruled that “Google imposed unlawful restrictio­ns on manufactur­ers of Android mobile devices.”

The court upheld the EU’s record fine of more than 4 billion euros ($4 billion) against Google.

That case was the third of three major cases brought against Google by the EU’s competitio­n czar Margrethe Vestager, whose legal challenges were the first worldwide to directly take on Silicon Valley tech giants.

South Korea fined Google nearly $180 million last year for abusing its dominant market position in a similar case regarding the Android system.

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