Business Day

Internet privacy is vital, Apple CEO says

• Comments made at China conference promoting censorship and control

- Agency Staff Beijing

Apple CE Tim Cook has called for future internet and artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technology to be infused with privacy, security and humanity.

Cook made the comments on Sunday at the opening ceremony for China’s World Internet Conference in Wuzhen, Zhejiang province. The conference is designed to globally promote the country’s vision of a more censored and controlled internet. It is the second Chinese appearance in two months for the executive, who met President Xi Jinping in October.

“The theme of this conference — developing a digital economy for openness and shared benefits — is a vision we at Apple share,” Cook said.

“We are proud to have worked alongside many of our partners in China to help build a community that will join a common future in cyberspace.”

Cook’s comments come at a pivotal point for the company’s future in China, its biggest market outside North America. It relies on the sale of hardware and services in the world’s most populated country to propel revenue and profit growth. But the efforts required to stay in China’s good graces are causing tension with civil libertaria­ns and politician­s at home.

Apple helped to support more than 5-million jobs in China, including 1.8-million local mobile app developers, he said.

Apple has come under fire for co-operating with Chinese authoritie­s in removing apps that give users there uncensored communicat­ions. In November, Apple complied with government orders to pull Microsoft’s Skype phone and video service from the Chinese version of its app store. Cook used a call with investors to justify such moves, saying it obeyed the laws of the markets where it operates.

“Much has been said of the potential downsides of AI, but I don’t worry about machines thinking like humans. I worry about people thinking like machines,” he said.

“We all have to work to infuse technology with humanity, with our values.”

Technology of the future should have openness, creativity and safeguards to protect users while providing privacy and decency, he added.

It is a goal that, according to Cook’s Chinese hosts, can only be accomplish­ed through more laws and regulation­s that control what can be shared online. Politburo member Wang Huning called for a global emergency response team that would respond in a crisis using new and undetermin­ed measures.

“What we propose is we should promote a controllab­le security and build a new order,” Wang said. “Cybersecur­ity is a serious challenge. Cyber crimes and cyber terrorism have grown more rampant. The world’s destiny has become more intertwine­d in cyberspace.”

Unlike Apple’s Cook, Google CE Sundar Pichai did not deliver a keynote speech and was on a panel to discuss the digital economy instead. Confusion among some of the conference staff on the ground meant many did not know when the session would begin — much of the vast hall remained empty partway through the session.

Wuzhen holds special significan­ce for the search giant, whose AI program defeated the world’s top-ranked player of the ancient board game Go at the same venue earlier in 2017 — a

CYBERSECUR­ITY IS A SERIOUS CHALLENGE. CYBER CRIMES AND CYBER TERRORISM HAVE GROWN MORE RAMPANT

point Pichai alluded to as he promoted the company’s kit of AI software tools, TensorFlow.

“There are many small and medium businesses in China who take advantage of Google to get their products to many other countries outside of China,” he said. “Technology is giving opportunit­ies at a global scale, driving interconne­ctedness and co-operation and I think it’s a big trend and I think it’s almost irreversib­le at this point.”

Other leading technology executives who took part include Alibaba Group Holding chairman Jack Ma, Cisco Systems’ Chuck Robbins, Tencent Holdings’ Pony Ma and Baidu cofounder Robin Li.

 ?? /Reuters ?? Employment giant: Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company supports more than 5-million jobs in China, including 1.8-million local mobile app developers.
/Reuters Employment giant: Apple CEO Tim Cook says the company supports more than 5-million jobs in China, including 1.8-million local mobile app developers.

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