The growth of Google's Android ecosystem could be stunted in India due to the antitrust order imposed by the Competition Commission of India (CCI).
In October, CCI fined Google $161 million for exploiting its dominant power in Android, which controls 97% of phones in India.
The commission urged Google not to block Android users in India from uninstalling pre-installed applications.
It also forces all app developers to only use the payment systems they have in place.
The Alphabet Inc-owned company said the CCI decision would force it to change its long-standing business model.
As a result, it will have to modify existing contracts by introducing new license agreements and changing existing arrangements with more than 1,100 device manufacturers and thousands of app developers.
As a result, progress in the growth of the ecosystem of device manufacturers, app developers and users could come to a halt because of the fix, according to its filing with India's Supreme Court.
India's decision angered Google even more than the European Commission's 2018 regulation that imposed illegal restrictions on Android mobile device makers.