Indonesia’s antitrust agency on Tuesday ordered Google to pay fines about 202 billion rupiah ($12.4 million) for unfair business practices related to its payment system services for Google Play Store, its software distribution platform, Reuters reported.

The agency launched an investigation into Alphabet Inc’s Google in 2022 on suspicion it had abused its dominant position by requiring Indonesian app developers to use Google Play Billing, at higher rates than other payment systems, or face removal from the Google Play Store, according to the report.

The panel said in a hearing that the systems reduced developers’ earnings as they led to the reduction of users, adding Google has been found breaking Indonesia’s law against monopoly.

The also agency found that Google had charged a fee of up to 30 percent via Google Play Billing, the panel said.

Google controlled a 93 percent market share in the country of 280 million people which has a fast-growing digital economy, the agency said.

A Google spokesperson said on Wednesday the company would appeal the ruling.

“Our current practices foster a healthy, competitive Indonesian app ecosystem,” the spokesperson said, adding it was committed to complying with Indonesian law, the report added.

According to Reuters, Google has previously said it had introduced a system where developers could offer users an alternative billing option.

Google has been fined more than 8 billion euros by the European Union in the last decade for anti-competitive practices related to its price comparison service, Android mobile operating system and advertising service, the report added.

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