Amazon, Google
Face Tough Government E-Commerce Rules: Report
E-commerce companies will be required to make data
available to the government within 72 hours, which could include information
related to national security, taxation and law and order, it said.
India's latest e-commerce policy
draft includes steps that could help local startups and impose government
oversight on how companies handle data.
The government has been working on
the policy for at least two years amid calls to reduce the dominance of global
tech giants like Amazon.com Inc., Alphabet Inc.'s Google and Facebook Inc.
Under rules laid out in a 15-page
draft seen by Bloomberg, the government would appoint an e-commerce regulator
to ensure the industry is competitive with broad access to information
resources. The policy draft was prepared by the Ministry of Commerce's
Department for Promotion of Industry & Internal Trade.
The proposed rules would also mandate
government access to online companies' source codes and algorithms, which the ministry
says would help ensure against "digitally induced biases" by
competitors. The draft also talks of ascertaining whether e-commerce businesses
have "explainable AI," referring to the use of artificial
intelligence.
The country's roaring digital economy,
with half a billion users and growing, is witnessing pitched battles in
everything from online retail and content streaming to messaging and digital
payments. Global corporations lead in each of these segments, while local
startups have sought help from a sympathetic government that recently banned
dozens of apps backed by Chinese technology giants.
The ministry will offer the draft
policy for stakeholder comments on a government website.
There's a tendency among some of the
leading companies to exercise control over most of the information repository,
the draft said.
"It is in the interest of the
Indian consumer and the local ecosystem that there are more service
providers" and that "the network effects do not lead to creation of
digital monopolies misusing their dominant market position," it said.
On the issue of where data is stored,
the draft leaves open the question of which e-commerce platforms would have to
keep information locally.
"Government, in consultation
with relevant stakeholders, will define the categories of e-commerce that would
require mirroring or localization," the draft said.
Hosting data overseas has been a
sticking point in previous drafts, which sparked criticism for being
heavy-handed in helping local startups at the expense of others.
E-commerce companies will be required
to make data available to the government within 72 hours, which could include
information related to national security, taxation and law and order, it said.
The draft policy also said e-commerce
platforms would be required to provide to consumers the details of sellers,
including phone numbers, customer complaint contacts, email and addresses. For
imported goods, the country of origin and value of work done in India should be
clearly specified, the policy said.
Also, foreign e-commerce companies
providing live streaming services that use payment tokens should be regulated
to ensure that users route such transactions through formal and regulated
payment channels, it said.