A group representing Indian startups has asked the country’s antitrust watchdog to order Alphabet’s Google to reinstate apps it removed for policy violations, a letter seen by Reuters shows, escalating a showdown with the US giant in a key market.
Google on Friday removed more than 100 Indian apps, including popular ones by Matrimony.com, for not complying with its policy of paying a service fee when in-app payment options other than Google’s are used.
The startups have now taken the issue to Competition Commission of India (CCI). The Commission has already spent months looking into startups’ complaint that Google is not following a 2022 antitrust directive that prevents it from taking adverse measures against companies which use alternate billing systems. Google denies wrongdoing.
The Alliance of Digital India Foundation (ADIF) in its March 1 letter to the CCI said Google’s decision to remove apps was a brazen move which was anti-competitive and the regulator should ask the company to reverse its decision.
Google’s move will cause irreparable harm to the entire market, ADIF said in the letter, which is not public.