Skip to main content
  1. Home
  2. Computing
  3. News

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

Google is paying for app code, and the reason is exactly what you think.

Add as a preferred source on Google
Google Logo
BoliviaInteligente / Unsplash

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.

Recommended Videos

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.

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.

Rachit Agarwal
Rachit is a seasoned tech journalist with over ten years of experience covering the consumer technology landscape.
This experiment shows how easy it is to poison an open-weight AI model for under $100
This research raises new doubts about trusting open weight AI models.
Computer, Electronics, Laptop

Open-weight AI models have been having a moment lately. Just this month, Moonshot's massive Kimi K3 model landed close behind Claude Fable 5 and GPT 5.6 Sol in several benchmarks, all while remaining fully open-weight and downloadable by anyone.

However, Katie Paxton-Fear, a cybersecurity lecturer at Manchester Metropolitan University and staff security advocate at Semgrep, managed to poison an open-weight model and proved how easily that openness can be turned against you (via The Register).

Read more
Asus’ powerful new gaming laptop with a 240Hz Mini LED display makes its global debut
The 2026 ROG Strix G18 pairs up to RTX 5080 graphics with an Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus CPU
ROG Strix G18 (2026) laptop

Asus has started rolling out the 2026 ROG Strix G18 globally, and the easiest way to describe it is as a slightly toned-down version of the ridiculous ROG Strix Scar 18. It keeps the same 24-core Intel Core Ultra 9 290HX Plus processor but tops out at an Nvidia GeForce RTX 5080 Laptop GPU instead of the Scar’s RTX 5090. (via Notebookcheck)

The Mini LED model gets the best balance

Read more
Every app on my phone has decided I need AI, and none of them bothered to ask
AI assistants are invading everything from photo libraries to messaging apps, and dismissing them only seems to guarantee they’ll return later.
Electronics, Phone, Mobile Phone

My wife doesn’t use AI very much. She isn’t philosophically opposed to it, nor is she waiting for the machines to overthrow civilization. She simply opens Google Photos because she wants to look at her photos.

Lately, however, the app keeps greeting her with invitations to try its AI tools. Google would very much like her to search her library conversationally, generate something new, or ask Gemini to edit a photo. She dismisses the prompt, gets on with her life, and eventually meets it again.

Read more