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Home » Google wants your app code so badly, it’s willing to pay for it
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Google wants your app code so badly, it’s willing to pay for it

By technologistmag.com4 June 20262 Mins Read
Google wants your app code so badly, it’s willing to pay for it
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Google has been quietly reaching out to Android developers with an offer to buy access to their code. As reported by 404 Media, the company sent emails to a select group of Google Play developers, inviting them to join what it calls a “confidential content offer pilot.” 

The email frames it as a revenue opportunity, saying developers can “get paid for sharing the code powering your apps, as well as your archived projects.” Google adds that developers retain their intellectual property rights and that the license is non-exclusive.

So what does Google actually want the code for?

According to the report, the email never mentions artificial intelligence, but a link buried in it leads to a page titled “partnerships to improve our AI products.” On that page, Google openly states that it is paying for “non-public content in a range of media formats” to improve its AI models.

Connecting the dots isn’t hard. Google’s Gemini is excellent at image and text generation but has been falling behind in AI coding tools, while Anthropic has ridden the success of Claude Code to a valuation higher than OpenAI. 

OpenAI has also launched its own Codex app, focusing on developers. At the recently concluded Google I/O, the company showcased its Antigravity 2.0 IDE that can create entire apps. 

It seems that Google wants to train its AI with real code to improve its coding capabilities, so it can compete with the likes of Claude Code and ChatGPT’s Codex. Buying real-world code from developers is a shortcut to closing that gap.

openai-codex-chatgpt-app-remote-monitoring-feature

Is there anything wrong with this?

While the long-term impact can be detrimental to developers, this approach from Google is not inherently wrong. At least it’s better than training AI on hundreds of thousands of books and online publications without permission, which is something most AI companies have done.

Developers retain their IP, the license is non-exclusive, and they get paid. That said, the lack of transparency in the email is worth noting. Framing an AI data acquisition program as a simple “revenue opportunity” without mentioning AI at all feels like Google is hoping developers won’t ask too many questions.

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