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PoliticsIndia

Indian government uninstalls preloaded security app plan

Timothy Jones with Reuters, AFP
December 3, 2025

The Indian government has dropped an order for a state-run cybersecurity app to be preloaded on all new smartphones. The rare policy reversal came amid criticism from politicians, privacy advocates and tech companies.

Two smartphones, with Sanchar Saathi app ready to be installed on one
The Indian government has backtracked on an order to preload a state-backed cybersecurity app on smartphonesImage: Richard Kujur/DW

The Indian government on Wednesday scrapped a recent directive to smartphone makers to install a non-removable cybersecurity app developed at its behest on new devices before purchase.

Reports of the order given to phone manufacturers on November 28 had aroused protests from opposition parties and privacy advocates.

Sources also indicated that major phone manufacturers Apple and Samsung were planning to circumvent the directive.

What has the government said?

The Communications Ministry said in a Wednesday statement that the "[g]overnment has decided not to make the pre-installation mandatory for mobile manufacturers."  

"The app is secure and purely meant to help citizens from bad actors in the cyber world," the statement said, adding that it was dropping the directive because the app was becoming very popular anyway, with 600,000 downloads of the app, called Sanchar Saathi ("communication partner"), since Tuesday.

The statement came a day after ministers from Prime Minister Narendra Modi's government came out in defense of the app, saying it was meant only to help track and block stolen phones to prevent their misuse.

However, they were reticent in the face of criticism as to why the app could not be deleted from devices.

At a debate held shortly before the government rollback was announced, opposition lawmakers slammed the directive.

Randeep Singh Surjewala of the Congress party said the app "could be a possible kill switch that can turn every cell phone into a brick, which the government could use against journalists, opposition leaders, and dissidents, if it so desires."

Surjewala also warned against the risk of hacking, which could "expose sensitive information, including passwords, bank account numbers and personal data."

Similar move from Moscow

Modi's plan to make the app's installation obligatory is similar to a move in August by Russian authorities, who ordered that a state-backed messenger app called MAX be pre-installed on all mobile phones and tablets.

Critics say that app could be used to track users.

The Internet Freedom Foundation advocacy group welcomed the Indian government's rollback but with reservations.

 "For now, we should treat this as cautious optimism, not closure, until the formal legal direction is published and independently confirmed," the group said in a post on social media.

New Russian messaging app raises online monitoring fears

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Edited by Sean Sinico

Timothy Jones Writer, translator and editor with DW's online news team.
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