The Indian government is widening the scope of its anti-theft and cybersecurity initiative to cover both new and used smartphones, an effort aimed at curbing device theft and online fraud but a move that is also raising fresh privacy concerns. As part of the expansion, the Indian telecom ministry is requiring companies that buy or trade used phones to verify every device through a central database of IMEI numbers. This comes in addition to a recent directive ordering smartphone manufacturers to preinstall the government’s Sanchar Saathi app on all new handsets and push it onto existing devices through a software update. Reuters first reported the news on Monday, which was later confirmed by the ministry in a public statement. Launched in 2023, the Sanchar Saathi portal allows users to block or trace lost and stolen phones. The system has blocked more than 4.2 million devices and traced 2.6 million more devices, per government data. The system expanded earlier this year with the release of a dedicated Sanchar Saathi app in January, which the government says helped recover more than 700,000 phones, including 50,000 in October alone. The Sanchar Saathi app has since gained broad adoption. The app has been downloaded nearly 15 million times and saw more than 3 million monthly active users in November — up more than 600% from its launch month, according to marketing intelligence firm Sensor Tower. Web traffic to Sanchar Saathi has also surged, with monthly unique visitors rising by more than 49% year-over-year, per Sensor Tower data shared with TechCrunch. The government’s order to preinstall Sanchar Saathi has already drawn significant backlash from privacy advocates, civil society groups, and opposition parties. Critics argue the move expands state visibility into personal devices without adequate safeguards. The Indian government, however, says the mandate is intended to address rising cases of cybercrime, such as IMEI duplication, device cloning, fraud in the secondhand smartphone market, and identity theft scams. Responding to the controversy, telecom minister Jyotiraditya M. Scindia said on Tuesday that Sanchar Saathi is “a completely voluntary and democratic system” and that users can delete the app if they do not wish to use it. The directive reviewed by TechCrunch — and circulating on social media on Monday — instructs manufacturers to ensure the preinstalled app is “readily visible and accessible to end users at the time of first use or device setup” and that “its functionalities are not disabled or restricted,” raising questions about whether the app is truly optional in practice. Techcrunch event San Francisco | October 13-15, 2026 Deputy telecom minister Pemmasani Chandra Sekhar said in media interviews that most major manufacturers were included in the government’s working group on the initiative, though Apple did not participate. Alongside pushing the Sanchar Saathi app, the telecom ministry is piloting an application program interface — or API — that would allow recommerce and trade-in platforms to upload customer identities and device details directly to the government, two people familiar with the matter told TechCrunch. The move would mark a significant step toward creating a nationwide record of smartphones in circulation. India’s used-smartphone segment is expanding rapidly as rising prices of new devices and longer replacement cycles push more consumers toward cheaper alternatives. India became the world’s third-largest market for secondhand smartphones in 2024. But as much as 85% of the secondhand phone sector remains unorganized, meaning most transactions occur through informal channels and through brick-and-mortar stores. The government’s move covers only formal recommerce and trade-in platforms, leaving much of the broader used-device market outside the scope of the current measures. While announcing the preinstallation of its app, the Indian government said the move would help enable “easy reporting of suspected misuse of telecom resources.” Privacy advocates say that the growing data flows could give authorities unprecedented visibility into device ownership — raising concerns over how the information could be used or misused. “It’s a troubling move to begin with,” said Prateek Waghre, head of programs and partnerships of Toronto-based nonprofit policy lab Tech Global Institute, told TechCrunch. “You’re essentially looking at the potential for every single device being ‘databased’ in some form. And then what uses their database can be put to it at a later date, we don’t know.” The Indian government has not yet detailed how the collected data will be stored, who will have access to it, or what safeguards will apply as the system expands. Digital rights groups say the sheer scale of India’s smartphone base — estimated at some 700 million devices — means even administrative changes can have outsized cons