Here's that hippie, pro-privacy, pro-freedom Apple y'all so love: Hong Kong protest safety app banned from iOS store

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This sounds par for the course when doing business internationally; content that is legal in one country may be illegal in another.

Off topic, but the EU’s highest court has passed a ruling saying that if they consider content illegal in their region that they can demand it be removed world wide. This ruling came after “Austrian politician, Eva Glawischnig-Piesczek, sued Facebook in her home nation to remove comments she considered bad for her reputation and insulting in a post that could be seen by any Facebook user.” The ruling isn’t yet even a week old so we have yet to see what will result from it.

Kind if back on topic, South Park’s most recent episode was on the movie industry appealing to China’s demands. But the episode was pretty bloody and violent. I don’t suggest watching it but thought it made for interesting commentary on trying to please China.
 
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Tim released a statement internally on this.

https://www.reuters.com/article/us-...BN1WP2SZ?feedType=RSS&feedName=technologyNews
In the message on an internal Apple website, Cook said the information in the app, including crowdsourced locations of police checkpoints and protest hotspots, was on its own “benign.”

“It is no secret that technology can be used for good or for ill. This case is no different,” Cook wrote.

Cook wrote that Apple based its decision on “credible information” from both Hong Kong police and Apple users in Hong Kong that the app was used “maliciously to target individual officers for violence and to victimize individuals and property where no police are present.”

“This use put the app in violation of Hong Kong law,” Cook said. “Similarly, widespread abuse clearly violates our App Store guidelines barring personal harm.”

Apple made the decision a day after a Chinese state newspaper wrote a commentary criticizing the company for approving the app.

“National and international debates will outlive us all, and, while important, they do not govern the facts,” Cook wrote in his letter. “In this case, we thoroughly reviewed them, and we believe this decision best protects our users.”
 
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