Exclusive: Apple to help India develop anti-spam app 
						after face-off with regulator
						
		 
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		 [November 15, 2017] 
		 By Aditya Kalra 
		 
		NEW DELHI (Reuters) - Apple Inc has agreed 
		to give limited help to the Indian government to develop an anti-spam 
		mobile application for its iOS platform, after refusing to do so based 
		on privacy concerns, according to sources and documents seen by Reuters. 
		 
		The U.S. tech giant has been locked in a tussle with India's telecoms 
		regulator for more than a year. Officials complained Apple dragged its 
		feet on advising the government how to develop an app that would allow 
		iPhone users to report unsolicited marketing texts or calls as spam. 
		 
		The government app was launched on Google's Android platform last year, 
		but an industry source with direct knowledge of the matter said Apple 
		pushed back on requests for an iOS version due to concerns that a 
		government app with access to call and text logs could compromise its 
		customers' privacy. 
		 
		Facing public criticism from the regulator, Apple executives flew to New 
		Delhi last month and told officials the company would help develop the 
		app, but only with limited capabilities, according to a government 
		official aware of the matter. 
		 
		Apple's executives have told India that its current iOS platform might 
		not allow for some of the government's requests, such as making call 
		logs available within the app that would allow users to report them as 
		spam, the official said. 
						
		
		  
						
		"They (Apple) will help develop an app which, to an extent, can solve 
		the requirements," said the official. 
		 
		An Apple spokesman confirmed that the new iOS features to combat spam 
		text messages would help the government build the app, but did not 
		comment on the app's potential inability to access call logs for 
		reporting spam, as the Android version does. 
		 
		The spokesman said Apple had not changed its stance on privacy. 
		 
		Apple's stand-off with the regulator comes at a time when it is seeking 
		greater access in India, the world's third-largest smartphone market. 
		The company has been lobbying the government for tax breaks to expand 
		its phone assembly operations in the country, where it reported doubling 
		its revenue versus the previous year for the quarter ending Sept. 30. 
		 
		Balancing growth and market share with protecting customer privacy has 
		become a defining challenge for global tech companies such as Apple, 
		which regularly clash with governments over allowing access to content 
		on their devices, especially for law enforcement needs. 
		 
		"This has now become more of an ego tussle between Apple and the 
		regulator," said Neil Shah of Hong Kong-based technology research firm 
		Counterpoint Research. He added that Apple was unlikely to agree to any 
		requests specific to India because of the precedent that would set. 
		 
		The chairman of the Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI) R.S. 
		Sharma said he was unhappy with Apple for not responding swiftly to the 
		government's requests. 
		 
		"We've told them they are harming their consumers," Sharma told Reuters 
		in an interview. "I hope good sense prevails upon them." 
		 
		Apple did not comment on TRAI's criticism, but said that it had taken 
		time to develop a privacy-friendly solution. 
		 
		APP TUSSLE, PRIVACY WOES 
		 
		Pesky marketing calls and unsolicited commercial text messages have 
		become a big problem in India. 
						
		
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			 A man speaks on his 
			mobile phone as he walks past an Apple iPhone advertisement 
			billboard on a street in New Delhi, India, April 25, 2016. REUTERS/Anindito 
			Mukherjee/File Photo 
              
Despite mobile users having the option to register themselves under a so-called 
"do not disturb" service to block marketers, businesses have gamed the system by 
using multiple phone numbers for promotions. 
 
TRAI's anti-spam mobile application, also called Do Not Disturb, has been 
downloaded more than 100,000 times from the Google Android app section. 
 
Before the app launches, it asks the user to allow it access to contacts and 
view text messages. Users can then start reporting numbers as spam. 
 
A spokesman for Google, a unit of Alphabet Inc, did not directly comment on the 
app, but said: "We believe in openness and in the ability of users to make 
purchasing and downloading choices without top-down enforcement or censorship. 
Users are prompted with requests for permissions that they can choose to accept 
or decline." 
Apple, however, has been worried. 
 
"The app can peep into logs, Apple had conveyed that their (privacy) policy does 
not allow this," said the industry source familiar with the matter. 
 
TRAI said the app does not raise any privacy concerns. 
 
MEETINGS, E-MAILS 
 
Apple has flown in several overseas-based executives to resolve the dispute with 
the Indian regulator, including its senior director for global privacy, and 
former Google executive, Jane Horvath. 
 
At least seven meetings have been held between the two sides and dozens of 
emails exchanged since last year, according to government officials and 
documents reviewed by Reuters. 
 
In August this year, months after the talks began, Apple wrote to TRAI saying 
that a technical meeting would help them establish "what is possible and not 
possible". 
  
The TRAI pushed back. 
 
"The whole exercise in organizing the proposed meeting would be a waste of 
resources ... please share concrete solutions that have a likelihood of 
addressing the issues we have been discussing over the past one year," the 
regulator wrote in September. 
 
Later that month, Apple again approached the TRAI saying it had identified 
potential solutions but they would require additional discussions with the 
regulator's technical staff. 
 
Horvath and other Apple executives met TRAI officials in October and conveyed 
they would help them develop the first version of the app with limited features. 
 
"They (Apple) are adopting dilatory tactics," said Sharma, the TRAI chief. 
"They've had meetings, meetings and meetings." 
 
(Additional reporting by Peter Henderson in San Francisco; Editing by Tom 
Lasseter and Alex Richardson) 
				 
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