BENGALURU (Reuters) -Alphabet Inc’s Google will enforce action against the apps of 10 companies for not paying a service fee for the usage of its app store platform in India, including potentially de-listing their apps, the tech giant said on Friday.
Google did not name the companies in question.
Companies including Walt Disney and Tinder-owner Match have previously sued Google over its policy of imposing a “service fee” of 11%-26% on in-app payments in India.
Google introduced the service fee after an antitrust directive ruled against an earlier 15%-30% fee and forced it to allow third-party payments.
Companies have said Google’s new service fee system is just a cloaked version of the earlier system.
“For an extended period of time, 10 companies, including many well-established ones, have chosen to not pay for the immense value they receive on Google Play by securing interim protections from court,” Google said in a blog post.
(Reporting by Munsif Vengattil in Bengaluru and Aditya Kalra in New Delhi; Editing by Jamie Freed and Tom Hogue)
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