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China Businesses Censorship Music The Internet Apple

Apple Music Caught Censoring Pro-Democracy Music In China (gizmodo.com) 117

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Gizmodo: Chinese journalists and netizens recently found that Apple Music's Chinese streaming service censored a song by Hong Kong singer Jacky Cheung that references the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests, an extremely politically sensitive topic for the Chinese Communist Party. The incident's 30th anniversary is coming up in June. Sophie Richardson, the China Director at Human Rights Watch, called the reported move "spectacularly craven." The Tiananmen protests are emblematic of a larger pro-democracy movement in China that was snuffed out by the Beijing government. Thousands of protesters were killed, but the exact numbers have themselves been censored by Chinese government officials.

Apple Music has also reportedly censored Anthony Wong and Denise Ho, two pro-democracy singers. After being noticed by Chinese netizens, the removals were reported by the Hong Kong Free Press and The Stand, two Hong Kong-based news outlets. Taiwan News also reported the censorship of Cheung's "Ren Jian Dao." The music remains available on Apple Music's North American products.
"By removing a song referring the Tiananmen Massacre, @apple is actively participating in the Chinese Communist Party's agenda of scrubbing the colossal violations it has committed against the Chinese people from collective memory and rewriting history," tweeted Yaqiu Wang, a Chinese researcher with Human Rights Watch.
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Apple Music Caught Censoring Pro-Democracy Music In China

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  • Democracy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by The Altruist ( 1448701 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:06AM (#58414566)

    Because nothing is more threatening to a walled garden.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Because nothing is more threatening to a walled garden.

      That statement may not be understood by the masses as well as you assume.

      The only "walled garden" most Americans know about is the first-world problem of the iGarden, which ironically is run by a liberal company within a democracy.

    • by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @10:15AM (#58414820)
      Are they expecting apple to take a stand when money is involved or something? Can't see it happening to be honest.
    • by DickBreath ( 207180 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @10:22AM (#58414874) Homepage
      Think Different!

      Just like everyone else. Don't rock the boat. Rebrand 'prison camp' to 'walled garden'.

      How dare you think you should be able to make a repair instead of buying the latest thing we tell you to buy!

      Complaining about the lack of a headphone jack is a sign of cowardice comrad.
  • Business as usual (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:11AM (#58414576)

    Apple is not in the business of free speech, they're in the business of making money. If censoring one song means they can keep making money, they will.

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Apple is not in the business of free speech, they're in the business of making money. If censoring one song means they can keep making money, they will.

      We were just going along with orders mein herr!

    • Local laws and regulations require Censoring. Look at germany. Look at France. where certain historical items are not allowed for trade like nazi gear.
      And even look at the US where you have to censor crypto when sold overseas. You used not to be able to advertise if you were a lawyer. You can't advertise cigarettes near schools and other venues for minors. You also can't sell certain drugs, not just illicit drugs, in the US that are legal in europe.

      Ronald Reagan banned envionmentalists from canda (Farl

      • Local laws and regulations require Censoring. Look at germany. Look at France. where certain historical items are not allowed for trade like nazi gear. And even look at the US where you have to censor crypto when sold overseas. You used not to be able to advertise if you were a lawyer. You can't advertise cigarettes near schools and other venues for minors. You also can't sell certain drugs, not just illicit drugs, in the US that are legal in europe.

        Ronald Reagan banned envionmentalists from canda (Farley Mowatt).

        Countries ban things that offend their sensibilities.

        This is more like saying you're not allowed to talk about the whole slavery thing.

  • by Roodvlees ( 2742853 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:12AM (#58414580)
    Because if you can't attack peaceful people have people accept it as okay, you're just a business.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    Coming from the far left who want to ban speech they don't like.

    • Re:Hypocrisy (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Quakeulf ( 2650167 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:18AM (#58414610)
      Left and right is a false dichotomy to drive divide-and-conquer so we fight each others instead of those who push this misdirection.
      • Liberals = shit (Score:1, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward

        Nope, the left is the censorship movement.

        I like the "both sides are equally bad" arguments from liberals. Its them finally admitting liberals are shit and they know it. They use the "both sides are equally bad" to justify them staying liberal even thought they know it is shit.
        Other great liberal positions:
        Support KKK member as VA gov
        Support serial rapist as VA lt. gov
        Support killing live born babies and calling it abortion
        Support illegals killing US citizens and protect them from consequences like jail o

        • Really pining for the fjords aren't you.
        • Nope, the left is the censorship movement.

          When you can make your point without name calling and using racial or ethnic slurs, I might be inclined to support at least your right to speak. If you can't do that, then nothing you say has value.

          When the points you make are not supportable by good data, people are inclined to filter you out because who cares what you say based on things you either made up or are just spreading around because your friend said it. If you have a valid argument that is being censor

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            by Anonymous Coward

            Only read your first sentence. There were no ethnic slurs, you lied because you can't help but be shit.

            Look back over last 4 years and see EVERY liberal calling me a racist, bigot, homophobe and you not ONCE calling them out.
            You are also shit. The DNC/liberals ARE the party of the KKK (see gov of VA) there is no debating it. You don't like being called shit or a racist, then don't support the KKK.
            Don't support killing live born babes, don't support illegals killing US citizens and calling us racists for

            • There's a reason people don't listen to you, and you find yourself and your opinions not making it very far, and it has nothing to do with your politics.

              • by Anonymous Coward

                Ahh, the modern left. The party of projection. Classical liberals are great. Too bad there are seemingly none left.

                There's a reason people don't listen to you

                Projection! Someone said they did not listen to your tirade because of you lying in the first sentence. Of course the mature thing to do is say the same thing back.

            • Look back over last 4 years and see EVERY liberal calling me a racist, bigot, homophobe and you not ONCE calling them out.

              Referring to your history while using AC makes no sense. Going by posting history it is the AC who is the biggest racist, bigoted, *phobe ever. As for politics, AC is radically marxist, libertarian to the point of anarchy, and a totalitarian theocrat all at the same time.

          • by Anonymous Coward

            "Russian collusion is a proven fact, there is no argument about this topic."

            Citation please.

        • The Right is also the censorship movement. The Left and Right are both highly in favor of restricting speech that they disapprove of, it's just not the same speech that they want suppressed.

          On the Right I see many who want to suppress right to have a free choice of religion (ie, anti-muslim), the right to give advice on abortions, and so forth. Historically the Right was for suppressing free speech with obscenity cases and pornography. Right wing governments across the planet are restricting the free pres

  • Everybody knew this was what they were going to do in China, no matter what they said, right?

  • by aepervius ( 535155 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:19AM (#58414618)
    I am sure also apple music Germany is censoring selling pro nazi song sales. We may not like the law of *their* country, but apple has to respect local laws *where ever* it sells. It is pretty much so in every country that the law of the location of the buyer is the one which applies, not the law of the seller. If they don't want to respect the law of a country, the solution is simply : don't sell to anybody in that country. Many US outfit do that if you try to go to their site with an EU address they simply throw you out and say "GDPR we don't want you". Same principle.
    • Funny, no-one used this argument to defend IBM when their tech was used to count bodies in Nazi Germany, in line with the law of the country and all...
    • I am sure also apple music Germany is censoring selling pro nazi song sales. We may not like the law of *their* country, but apple has to respect local laws *where ever* it sells.

      Yeah but Germany is basically a democracy with free citizens. China is a repressive autocracy that harvests organs from political prisoners.

      Supporting one is not the same as supporting the other.

      If they don't want to respect the law of a country, the solution is simply : don't sell to anybody in that country.

      That does seem to be

      • Whether one is a democracy or an autocracy does not matter. That way my point. No matter what you have got to respect local law or get out. So when people get angry at "apple censoring" they are either idiot not realizing they have to respect local law, or they should vote with their wallet and not buy apple (which you know as well as me won't happen).
  • and was curated for the Communist party.

    Welcome to Communist censorship.
    In free Taiwan the real China people can listen to music.
    Recall the 1989 Tiananmen Square pro-democracy protests.
    Talk about the history of Communist China.
    Look at cartoon bears.
    Read books like 1984.
  • apple is all RED China they will even unlock phones there but not help the FBI at all.

  • It's in Apple's DNA (Score:3, Informative)

    by jenningsthecat ( 1525947 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:26AM (#58414648)

    Apple has a history of censoring content in its platforms [wikipedia.org]. In this it seems that they're no different from many other major players. That's probably not surprising, given the symbiotic relationship between big corporations and governments. But there's an inconsistency here. On the one hand, Apple actively opposes US law enforcement's efforts to compromise users' private data. On the other hand, they seem to get behind censorship in a big way, sometimes even in support of totalitarianism.

    People behave inconsistently - I guess entities that enjoy 'corporate personhood' exhibit similar behaviour.

  • welcome to China (Score:5, Insightful)

    by v1 ( 525388 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @09:42AM (#58414704) Homepage Journal

    This article can be summed up with "company respects sovereignty of a country, and I'm outraged!"

    Anyone doing business in China has to follow the laws, even if they don't align with the typical morals of the country where the business is based.

    "Obey our laws or get out of China." It's just that simple.

    TFA makes it sound like they have some magical 3rd choice and they're being evil for not "doing the right thing". It's pretty self-evident that they don't want to pack up and leave China, and removing a few songs from their store there (that are basically illegal to distribute in China) is a very small price to pay for them to stay in the market. Apple isn't above the law in China, they mow down large crowds of people trying to push this song's message, you don't think they will kick out Apple? This article is just trying to grab some headlines by reminding us that water is wet.

    • by fortythirteen ( 5606969 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @10:38AM (#58415002)
      There is nothing wrong with expecting ethics to outweigh profit. Is a shipowner who transports slaves considered innocent if they are moving them between countries that have legalized slavery, or are we rightfully outraged by the presence of a slave trader?
    • This article can be summed up with "company respects sovereignty of a country, and I'm outraged!"

      This article can be summed up as "company makes lots of money supporting the censorship of a repressive, autocratic and deeply unpleasant regime."

      "Obey our laws or get out of China." It's just that simple.

      Yes and the ethical thing is to just get out.

      TFA makes it sound like they have some magical 3rd choice and they're being evil for not "doing the right thing".

      Not really. They're pointing out the activity. You

  • Cause, you know, Chinese Democracy [rollingstone.com] and all.

  • by Hasaf ( 3744357 ) on Wednesday April 10, 2019 @10:49AM (#58415084)

    The Three T's and X were: Tibet, Tiananmen, Taiwan, and Xinjiang. It was made clear that we (the Westerners) had no knowledge or opinions on these topics. As such we have nothing to say about them.

    One day a new assistant asked me about Tiananmen. I asked her what she knew. She told me that her history teacher told her that it was a beautiful park in Beijing where people fly kites. Her grandfather had told her something much more in line with what those of us who watched it life on TV saw.

    I was not entirely sure about her at that point, so my answer to her was, "you should honour your grandfather."

    She laughed and said, "that is so Chinese." However, she also understood my answer.

    • by Hasaf ( 3744357 )

      Just to add, the X was not there when I started living in China, it was just the three T's. The X got added later.

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