Google launches 'safety charter' to protect Indians from online frauds

IANS June 17, 2025 232 views

Google has introduced a Safety Charter to safeguard Indian users from online scams and cyber threats. The initiative includes AI-powered fraud detection, blocking millions of scam texts and risky app installs. Partnerships with IIT-Madras and $20M in cybersecurity funding aim to strengthen digital defenses. Google’s AI now detects new scams faster, protecting users and businesses alike.

"AI’s ability to learn, reason, and act at scale is allowing defenders to stay ahead of attackers like never before." – Heather Adkins, Google Security VP
New Delhi, June 17: Google on Tuesday announced a major initiative to make India’s digital space safer by unveiling its new ‘Safety Charter’ during the ‘Safer with Google India Summit’.

Key Points

1

Google’s Digikavach has reached 17.7 crore Indians with scam awareness

2

Google Pay prevented Rs 13,000 crore in fraud in 2024

3

Play Protect blocked 6 crore risky app installs

4

AI detects 20x more scam websites

The initiative is focused on protecting users from online fraud, boosting cybersecurity for critical infrastructure and ensuring that AI is developed responsibly.

This Safety Charter is built around three key goals -- keeping internet users safe from scams and frauds, strengthening cybersecurity for governments and businesses and building responsible AI systems that protect people.

Google’s 'Digikavach' programme, a key part of the initiative, has already reached over 17.7 crore Indians with AI-powered tools and awareness campaigns against financial scams.

Google’s systems are becoming more powerful with AI -- its Search now identifies 20 times more scam websites, and scam attacks on customer service and government platforms have dropped by 80 per cent and 70 per cent, respectively.

On the messaging side, Google Messages is blocking over 500 million scam texts every month.

Google Pay, which is widely used in India, has sent out over 4.1 crore alerts to warn users about possible frauds. It also helped prevent fraud worth Rs 13,000 crore in 2024 alone.

The company’s app safety system, Google Play Protect, has blocked nearly 6 crore risky app installs across 1.3 crore devices since it was piloted in India in October 2024.

Gmail, which is used by billions globally, is automatically stopping more than 99.9 per cent of spam, phishing attempts and malware.

Google is also working to strengthen cybersecurity on a larger scale. It has introduced a new AI-powered approach to detect threats early and share that information with other companies and government bodies.

Its project zero team, working with DeepMind, has used AI to discover dangerous flaws in widely used software like SQLite -- before attackers can exploit them.

To further support the ecosystem, Google.org has pledged $20 million to expand the Asia-Pacific Cybersecurity Fund, including $5 million to The Asia Foundation.

This will help set up 10 new cyberclinics in the region and partner with Indian universities to train students and small businesses in digital safety.

Another key partnership was announced with IIT-Madras to advance Post-Quantum Cryptography.

This research will help make India’s digital systems more secure in the future, even against next-generation cyber threats.

Google’s leaders highlighted that safety is a core part of their design and technology. Preeti Lobana, Vice President and Country Manager for Google India, said that building trust in India’s digital infrastructure is crucial to the country’s development goals.

She added that Google’s AI systems are already able to detect never-before-seen scams and attacks, giving users an added layer of protection.

Heather Adkins, Vice President of Engineering for Google Security, pointed out that online threats are now evolving at machine speed. She said AI’s ability to learn, reason, and act at scale is allowing defenders to stay ahead of attackers like never before.

Reader Comments

R
Rajesh K.
This is a much needed initiative! My elderly parents almost fell for a KYC scam last month. More awareness campaigns in regional languages would help rural areas too. Google is doing great work for digital India 🇮🇳
P
Priya M.
While I appreciate Google's efforts, most scams originate from fake customer care numbers that still appear in search results. Hope they fix this loophole soon. The Rs 13,000 crore fraud prevention is impressive though!
A
Amit S.
Great to see IIT-Madras collaboration for Post-Quantum Cryptography! India needs to lead in cybersecurity tech. Jai Hind! 🔐 The 500 million scam texts blocked monthly shows how big the problem is.
N
Neha T.
As a small business owner, I've lost money to UPI frauds before. Google Pay alerts have saved me twice this year. More power to Digikavach program! 🙏 But they should also educate people about not sharing OTPs.
V
Vikram J.
Good initiative but most cyber crimes in India go unpunished. Google can only do so much - our police cyber cells need major upgrades too. The $20 million fund should help train more professionals.
S
Sunita R.
The 99.9% spam blocking in Gmail is impressive! I remember getting so many lottery scam emails before. Now my inbox is clean. Hope they extend these protections to WhatsApp scams too - that's where most fraud happens nowadays.
K
Karan P.
While tech solutions are welcome, we Indians need to become more

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