Tech & Society

Indian ride-sharing app Ola faces legal trouble in Sri Lanka

Ola, the largest ride-hailing app in India, might find it tough going in Sri Lanka after a local competitor accused the Indian firm of illegally stealing confidential business information, according to a report from Business Standard.

Executives from the Sri Lankan ride-sharing service PickMe, who currently boast the country’s most popular app of its kind, leveled the formal complaint of “commercial espionage” that will require top Ola officials to go before court on Feb. 26 in the Sri Lankan capital of Colombo.

The criminal action cites the violation of Sri Lanka’s Intellectual Property Act, according to local daily FT, as PickMe executives accuse Ola representatives of stealing “valuable and confidential” information in the company’s possession.

The accused parties listed in the criminal complaint are ANI Technologies Lanka Ltd., which is a subsidiary of the company that owns Ola, and its directors – Karan Veer Singh Shekhawat and Nimish Joshi – as well as operations manager Murali Barath, according to FT.

An Ola spokesperson responded to the accusation in a statement Business Standard, telling the news site that the claims are “absolutely frivolous.”

Ola has received significant funding from SoftBank, the massive Japanese telecom firm that has invested in the other major ride-sharing companies like Uber, Malaysia’s Grab, and China’s Didi. Business Standard reported that the company has raised more than $1 billion from all investors in the past year and a half.

The transportation company has clearly begun 2018 with a concentrated effort in spreading beyond India’s borders. In January, the company announced it has started hiring drivers in Australia where it will try to find space in an Aussie market that is currently dominated by Uber.

Ola’s journey into new Pacific markets follows major global decisions by fellow Softbank investees. Didi’s leap into Latin America saw it buy the Brazilian cab service 99, and Softbank has reportedly directed Uber to stick with its traditional markets in the U.S. and Europe.

Michael Krumholtz

Michael is a journalist who has been covering crime, tech, sports, politics, and travel in Latin America, where he has lived for the past four years while suffering from barbecue withdrawals.

Recent Posts

India Inc. Increments are Stabilizing at ~9% as Companies Focus on Cost Discipline: Deloitte India Talent Outlook

Against the backdrop of a resilient macroeconomic environment and sector-specific growth dynamics, salary increment budgets…

5 hours ago

Funding alert: Tech startups that raked in moolah this month

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent funding events in the tech ecosystem, seeking…

7 hours ago

Fundraising Is Storytelling, Not Slide-Building—And AI Is Changing That Equation

For years, many founders believed that successful fundraising was about building the perfect pitch deck.…

1 day ago

AI Launches: Infrastructure, Mobile Phones, Sales, Cloud & Crypto

The Tech Panda takes a look at recent launches in the superfast field of Artificial…

1 day ago

These 15 Indian CEOs are accelerating innovation in the era of AI

As the growth prospects of economies around the world battle against skyrocketing costs, geopolitical instability,…

2 days ago

India’s tech pulse: Ecosystem harkat & the shifting investment temperament

India has been upping the game in investments as Indian startups forge ahead with new…

2 days ago