Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI: IN a move aimed at promoting homegrown digital solutions, the Ministry of Education has directed all its officials to use the Zoho Office Suite for official document-related tasks. The decision aligns with Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s Atmanirbhar Bharat initiative and the broader Swadeshi movement. Zoho Office Suite, developed by Sridhar Vembuled Zoho Corporation, offers a comprehensive platform for documents, spreadsheets, presentations, and more. Key tools include Zoho Writer for documents, Zoho Sheet for spreadsheets, and Zoho Show for presentations, all stored securely on Zoho WorkDrive. With Cloud-based access, users can work anytime, anywhere.
The integration with NIC mail ensures that Government employees can access Zoho tools without additional logins or installations, enabling secure document handling, smoother collaboration, and more efficient workflows across departments. Similarly, the Ministry of Electronics and Information Technology has partnered with academic institutions to develop BharatDB, a secure, high-performance, open-source database system meant for Government and enterprise use, while MapmyIndia is increasingly being used in official mapping applications.
India’s ambition to build a self-reliant, indigenous digital ecosystem, spanning messaging, email, operating systems, entertainment, and even AI platforms, is both timely and necessary. As global technology supply chains become more fragile and geopolitical rivalries sharpen, over-dependence on foreign digital platforms poses a risk to India’s digital sovereignty. The Government’s push for indigenous solutions is, therefore, an appropriate strategic response.The idea is to create robust local alternatives across categories such as operating systems, social media platforms, mapping technologies, cybersecurity tools, and app stores, thereby reducing the possibility of ‘access disruptions’ due to actions or policies of global providers. Some of these efforts are already showing promise.
Yet, India’s challenge lies not in building apps, but ecosystems. The success of global platforms like WhatsApp, Gmail, and Instagram rests heavily on the network effect, where the value of a platform increases exponentially as more people use it. This creates near-insurmountable barriers for new entrants. India has seen this first-hand: Hike Messenger – once touted as the ‘Indian WhatsApp’ – was forced to shut down. Koo, which emerged as an Indian alternative to Twitter (now X).
Unlike China, India cannot simply ban foreign platforms to create room for domestic ones. Its model must rely on fair competition and smart regulation. One possible approach is to require smartphone manufacturers to preinstall a select set of verified Indian apps as defaults, much as Google’s own suite is now bundled on Android devices. More importantly, India should seriously consider interoperability mandates. Interoperability, where users on different platforms can communicate seamlessly, can level the playing field for new players. The success of UPI offers a strong precedent: by making it mandatory for all banks to connect to a single interoperable payment system, the Government enabled rapid, inclusive adoption.
The European Union’s Digital Markets Act has similar provisions for messaging platforms. India could apply interoperability to messaging services and social media platforms, breaking down the walled gardens of global tech giants. But for any local platform to thrive, users must trust it to offer the same ease, security, and reliability they get from global apps.India must, therefore, invest in digital literacy, user design, and transparent privacy practices. The Government can become an anchor client to give domestic apps the initial scale they need before expanding commercially.