Rift deepens between Apple, India's telecom regulator
over anti-spam app
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[March 27, 2018]
By Aditya Kalra and Stephen Nellis
NEW DELHI/SAN FRANCISCO (Reuters) - U.S.
technology giant Apple Inc and India's telecoms regulator are at
loggerheads over the development of a government anti-spam mobile
application, with user privacy at the heart of a deepening rift between
the two sides.
The latest impasse comes after Apple in October agreed to provide some
help to the regulator to tap into new iOS features to build the "Do Not
Disturb" app, which allows users to report unsolicited calls and text
messages as spam.
At issue has been Apple's contention that allowing the app broad access
to customers' call and text logs could compromise privacy.
The arguments are the latest example of challenges faced by global
technology players, who often need to balance user privacy while
handling requests from governments and regulators around access to
content on devices. In July, Apple removed apps from its Chinese App
Store that helped users browse the Internet privately in order to comply
with a new cyber security law.
In India, despite October's agreement, the two sides have not met since
November, and the Indian regulator told Apple in January it was still
waiting for "basic clarifications" on what exactly can the iOS version
of its app offer, according to a government source with direct knowledge
and an email exchange seen by Reuters.
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Apple told Reuters last week the government app "as envisioned violates
the privacy policy" of its App Store. Apple said it had been working
with government engineers and would "continue discussing ways they can
design their app to keep users' personal data safe".
Apple's stance, though, has irked the head of the Telecom Regulatory
Authority of India (TRAI), R.S. Sharma, who says he will consult his
legal team on how Apple could be pushed to help develop the application
more swiftly.
"We will take appropriate legal action," Sharma told Reuters in an
interview. "This is unjust, it shows the approach and attitude of this
company."
He did not elaborate on what action the regulator might take.
Apple did not comment on Sharma's remarks, but said that it shared
TRAI's goal of protecting customers from unwanted calls and messages.
NUISANCE CALLS
Millions of Indians are inundated by telemarketing calls and other
unsolicited text messages daily in the world's second largest wireless
telecoms market behind China.
The Android version of TRAI's "Do Not Disturb" app was introduced in
2016. When opened for the first time, it requires users to grant the app
permissions to access contacts and view text messages and then allows
users to report them as spam.
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R. S. Sharma, head of Telecom Regulatory Authority of India (TRAI),
poses for a photograph at the his office in New Delhi, India, March
16, 2018. Picture taken March 16, 2018. REUTERS/Saumya Khandelwal
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Google has said keeping users' information secure is its top priority and the
company believes in "openness and in the ability of users to make purchasing and
downloading choices without top-down enforcement or censorship".
Apple said it would not modify its guidelines to allow any app access to
contacts, see call logs or view text messages as those functionalities violate a
user's data security and privacy.
TRAI's Sharma disagrees. "Users should be in control of this data," he said.
Apple said it has offered to have its technical teams meet TRAI, but a
government source said the regulator was awaiting more details from the company
before proceeding.
The tussle comes at a critical time for Apple as it looks to India as a key
growth market where it is also in talks to expand iPhone manufacturing.
TRAI has in the past taken decisions that have dented the plans of other tech
giants. In 2015, it called for the suspension of Facebook's pared-back free
Internet service, Free Basics, and months later it dashed the company's plans by
supporting net neutrality - a principle that says Internet service providers
should treat all traffic on their networks equally - effectively barring the
service.
Things could be tougher in Apple's case, however.
Any outright legal challenge by Sharma - an official who has previously worked
as the federal IT secretary - is likely to be harder for TRAI to pursue as it
directly regulates only licensed telecom providers.
Nevertheless, Sharma could request the department of telecommunications - which
he works closely with - to invoke a decades-old law that allows the government
to impose regulations even on handset makers, according to two Indian lawyers
who specialize in technology policy.
"It's likely to be more of a public relations battle against Apple rather than a
legal one," said Kunal Bajaj, a former TRAI consultant.
(Reporting by Aditya Kalra and Stephen Nellis; Editing by Euan Rocha, Jonathan
Weber and Alex Richardson)
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