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Google Pay Faces New Probe In South Korea

South Korea has launched an antitrust probe into Google over its plan to enforce its 30% Play Store commission by disallowing any apps circumventing its payment system, a top official said Thursday, October 8.

Google has always required apps offered on the Play Store’s virtual shelves to use its payment system, which takes an industry-standard 30% cut, the same as Apple does, reported Reuters.

The company has been lax about enforcing the rule, however, unlike Apple, which is currently involved in a legal battle with the owners of the Fortnite game series after banning the app when developers allowed users to circumvent the payment system.

The internet giant announced last month that the new policy, set to take effect next year, applies to fewer than 3% of developers with apps in the Play Store.

But the announcement prompted a backlash from South Korean app developers, who claim the new plan will allow Google to collect too high a fee.

Joh Sung-wook, chairperson of the Korea Fair Trade Commission (KFTC), on Thursday said Google’s plan was being investigated for possible “anti-competitive practises.”

“Competition isn’t working properly in the industry,” she told lawmakers during a parliamentary audit.

“We are searching for anti-competitive practices in order to restore competition.”