The government has decided to ban another 47 apps that were operating as the clones of the 59 Chinese apps banned last month. According to reports, these apps were violating India’s data protocol and were compromising the data safety of users. The Ministry of Electronics and IT’s new ban is aimed at those apps that were facilitating access to previously banned services such as TikTok and Cam Scanner. The new apps to be banned include Cam Scanner Advance.
The move comes as the government contemplates restricting access to several more Chinese apps and services. The government has now drawn up a list of another 275 Chinese apps, to be examined for possible violations of national security and user privacy.
The list includes popular gaming app PlayerUnknown’s Battlegrounds (PUBG), backed by Chinese internet company Tencent, short video sharing application Zili, which is owned by phone-maker Xiaomi, AliExpress by ecommerce giant Alibaba, as well as apps like Resso and ULike from TikTok-owner ByteDance.
Of those in the new list of 275 Chinese apps to be scrutinised, PUBG finds its largest market in India, having generated about 175 mn installs to date or 24% of its worldwide downloads, according to App intelligence firm Sensor Tower estimates.
Further, short video sharing app Zili has bucked the trend of Indians moving towards ‘Made in India’ applications in the aftermath of the ban on TikTok last month. Despite the presence of ‘Indian’ alternatives to TikTok such as Trell, Mitron and Chingari, Chinese app Zili has seen a 167% growth in downloads in India since the ban on Chinese apps took effect on June 29. The app has seen its India downloads grow from 3 Mn to 8 Mn in the three weeks since the ban.
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