Tech Industry on banning 59 Chinese apps in India

India’s move to ban 59 Chinese apps including TikTok found widespread support among the country`s startup and tech community, who are eyeing this opportunity to back promising homegrown ventures.

India’s move to ban 59 Chinese apps including TikTok found widespread support among the country`s startup and tech community, who are eyeing this opportunity to back promising homegrown ventures.

The government on Monday prohibited the use of several apps citing the threat posed to the country`s “sovereignty and security”. This comes after border tensions between India and China flared up to their worst levels in over four decades.

Prominent Silicon Valley-based angel investor Balaji S Srinivasan is teaming with AngelList founder Naval Ravikant to back Indian versions of the 59 Chinese apps that the government has banned. Srinivasan invited proposals along with links of working prototypes through a tweet.

Anand Lunia, founding partner, IndiaQuotient, highlighted the difference between Chinese apps with no physical presence in India and homegrown apps backed by Chinese investors.

“This is a welcome move from the government against platforms that have had serious privacy, cyber security and national security risks. We expect the government to continue their support for the Indian startup ecosystem," Berges Malu, Director, Public Policy, ShareChat, told IANS.

ShareChat is an Indian video creation app similar to short-video making app Tiktok. The app allows users to communicate and interact with other users on the platform.

ShareChat currently serves more than 60 million monthly active users in 15 different Indian languages. Most of its active users hail from tier-2 and tier-3 cities (like TikTok), with the majority of them relying on 2G networks.

Naveen Tewari, Founder and CEO, InMobi Group said that this is the digital `Aatma Nirbhar` moment that most Indians have been rooting for.

"As the number one top video app on the Google Play Store, Roposo is very well positioned to lead this movement. Roposo will continue to build on the trust and love that 55 million Indian users have placed in us," said Tewari.

The government banned the Chinese apps after it received complaints from various sources including several reports about misuse of some mobile apps available on Android and iOS platforms for stealing and surreptitiously transmitting users` data in an unauthorised manner to servers which have locations outside India.

"Banning Chinese apps is a great initiative to ensure privacy of the Indian users` data and to protect the country against the potential threat these apps pose to our national security," said Piyush, CEO & Founder, Rooter.

"The Indian technology ecosystem has come a long way in the last 5-6 years and is at par with the capabilities of any other startup ecosystem in the world," he added.

Other Chinese apps in the banned list are Club Factory, SHAREit, Likee, Mi Video Call (Xiaomi), Weibo, Baidu, Bigo Live and more.

India’s move to ban 59 Chinese apps including TikTok found widespread support among the country`s startup and tech community, who are eyeing this opportunity to back promising homegrown ventures.

The government on Monday prohibited the use of several apps citing the threat posed to the country`s “sovereignty and security”. This comes after border tensions between India and China flared up to their worst levels in over four decades.

Prominent Silicon Valley-based angel investor Balaji S Srinivasan is teaming with AngelList founder Naval Ravikant to back Indian versions of the 59 Chinese apps that the government has banned. Srinivasan invited proposals along with links of working prototypes through a tweet.

Anand Lunia, founding partner, IndiaQuotient, highlighted the difference between Chinese apps with no physical presence in India and homegrown apps backed by Chinese investors.

“This is a welcome move from the government against platforms that have had serious privacy, cyber security and national security risks. We expect the government to continue their support for the Indian startup ecosystem," Berges Malu, Director, Public Policy, ShareChat, told IANS.

ShareChat is an Indian video creation app similar to short-video making app Tiktok. The app allows users to communicate and interact with other users on the platform.

ShareChat currently serves more than 60 million monthly active users in 15 different Indian languages. Most of its active users hail from tier-2 and tier-3 cities (like TikTok), with the majority of them relying on 2G networks.

Naveen Tewari, Founder and CEO, InMobi Group said that this is the digital `Aatma Nirbhar` moment that most Indians have been rooting for.

"As the number one top video app on the Google Play Store, Roposo is very well positioned to lead this movement. Roposo will continue to build on the trust and love that 55 million Indian users have placed in us," said Tewari.

The government banned the Chinese apps after it received complaints from various sources including several reports about misuse of some mobile apps available on Android and iOS platforms for stealing and surreptitiously transmitting users` data in an unauthorised manner to servers which have locations outside India.

"Banning Chinese apps is a great initiative to ensure privacy of the Indian users` data and to protect the country against the potential threat these apps pose to our national security," said Piyush, CEO & Founder, Rooter.

"The Indian technology ecosystem has come a long way in the last 5-6 years and is at par with the capabilities of any other startup ecosystem in the world," he added.

Other Chinese apps in the banned list are Club Factory, SHAREit, Likee, Mi Video Call (Xiaomi), Weibo, Baidu, Bigo Live and more.


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