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Will SC Rewrite Digital Rules? Google Takes On CCI Fine Amid Allegations of App Market Bias


Updated: July 26, 2025 15:08

Image Source : India Briefing

Legal Flashpoint:

Google has filed an appeal in the Supreme Court of India against the National Company Law Appellate Tribunal’s (NCLAT) March 2025 ruling, which upheld key findings of the Competition Commission of India (CCI) regarding anti-competitive practices in its Play Store billing system. The penalty, originally Rs 936.44 crore, was reduced to Rs 216.69 crore, but Google is contesting both the substance and procedure of the verdict.

Key Highlights:

- CCI’s probe began in November 2020 following complaints from Indian digital platforms like Shaadi.com and Kuku FM

- Google was found guilty of enforcing mandatory use of its Google Play Billing System (GPBS) for paid apps and in-app purchases

- Developers were required to pay 15–30% commission, while Google’s own apps like YouTube were exempt

- CCI accused Google of promoting Google Pay over rival UPI apps, violating Section 4(2)(e) of the Competition Act

- NCLAT upheld these findings but recalculated the fine based on Play Store-specific revenue in India

- Google’s appeal also challenges a May 1 clarification that reinstated two CCI directives on data usage and billing transparency

Developer Impact:

NCLAT directed Google to allow third-party billing systems, prohibit preferential treatment of its own payment services, and ensure developers can communicate freely with users outside the Play Store ecosystem.

What’s Next:

The Supreme Court will now examine whether NCLAT’s clarifications amounted to an impermissible review and whether Google’s billing practices truly stifle competition or serve platform integrity.

Sources: News18, BestMediaInfo, LawBeat, Livemint, StartupTalky, Economic Times, MSN India

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