Follow Slashdot blog updates by subscribing to our blog RSS feed

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
China Iphone Apple

Apple Services Censored in China Where Devices Flourished (bloomberg.com) 43

When it comes to many of Apple's latest services, iPhone users in China are missing out. From a report: Podcast choices are paltry. Apple TV+ is off the air. News subscriptions are blocked, and Arcade gaming is nowhere to be found. For years, Apple made huge inroads in the world's most populous nation with hardware that boasted crisp displays, sleek lines and speedy processors. It peddled little of the content that boxed U.S. internet giants Google and Facebook out of the country. But now that Apple is becoming a major digital services provider, it's struggling to avoid the fate of its rivals.

Apple services such as the App Store, digital books, news, video, podcasts and music, put the company in the more precarious position of information provider (or at least overseer), exposing it to a growing online crackdown by China's authoritarian government. While standard iPhone services like iMessage work in China, many paid offerings that help Apple generate recurring revenue from its devices aren't available in the country. That includes four new services that Apple announced this year: TV+ video streaming, the Apple Card, Apple Arcade and the News+ subscription. Other well-known Apple services can't be accessed in the country either, including the iTunes Store, iTunes Movie rentals, Apple Books and the Apple TV and Apple News apps.
Over the past year, Apple's Weather app lost its ability to show air quality index, or AQI, data for Chinese cities -- regardless of the user's location, the report adds. (Though this was due to a business dispute with Weather Channel.)
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Apple Services Censored in China Where Devices Flourished

Comments Filter:
  • sideload store fixes it and gives apple an out

  • This is news how? Less than 20 percent of the mobile devices in China run iOS. Without sidling up to the party, did they think that they could provide content from the other side of the great firewall and expect it to be available to users?

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Re 'Without sidling up to the party"
      Now full Communist censorship can be talked?
      About how a US company invests in and supports a Communist nation?
      That a US brand wants to support and invest in Communist China..

      In free nations people can read all about that support for a Communist nation.
      Talk and comment on such support by a US brand for Communism and consider their own support for that US brand :)
      The freedom to comment is the freedom to consider what to buy, support and use :)
  • After all, there are obvious parallels in See between the blind majority (the Chinese population) and the new children born with sight (Hong Kong's young protesters).

    Plus there was an unfortunate "Winnie the Pooh" reference in episode 2...

  • China censors. Companies that want to do business in China must comply with local law.

    There is nothing new or surprising about this. It has been going on for a long, long time. It's not news. I wish the editors at Slashdot would stop posting these stupid China censorship stories.

    If the people of China want to put an end to govt censorship, then the people of China need to start killing off members of the government - and the rest of the world needs to stay out of it.

"...a most excellent barbarian ... Genghis Kahn!" -- _Bill And Ted's Excellent Adventure_

Working...