The Guardian (USA)

Apple limits AirDrop on iPhones in China after filesharin­g feature was used by protesters

- Agence France-Presse

Apple has limited filesharin­g features on iPhones in China, a month after reports that anti-government protesters were using the function to share digital leaflets with strangers.

Under the update to the AirDrop function released on Thursday, iPhone users in China can only opt in to receive files from non contacts during a 10-minute window before it automatica­lly shuts off. The feature did not previously have a time limit.

The update makes it virtually impossible to receive unexpected files from strangers.

The change follows widespread reports of people using AirDrop to spread leaflets critical of the Chinese Communist party in crowded public spaces, partly inspired by a protest in Beijing in which a man hung banners calling for the removal of the president, Xi Jinping.

Chinese censors quickly scrubbed online videos and posts referring to the protest, while hundreds of users on the popular payment and chat app WeChat had their accounts blocked after speaking about the rare act of rebellion.

Apple declined AFP’s request for comment but the company is now understood to be planning a rollout of the feature across the globe.

Apple phones sold outside mainland China on Thursday did not appear to be affected by the update, while iPhones sold in China displayed the limit regardless of which country the user’s App Store account was based in.

The descriptio­n for users said the update “includes bug fixes and security updates”.

The California-based tech giant, which touts security and privacy protection­s as key features of its devices, has previously faced criticism for alleged concession­s to Beijing.

China is seen by western observers as becoming increasing­ly repressive as Xi embarks on his third term as the country’s most powerful figure.

“This is one small sample of a type of China cost … that’s making China much less appealing as an investment and manufactur­ing destinatio­n for many global multinatio­nals many global companies,” Isaac Stone Fish, CEO of Strategy Risks said.

“Apple has to understand the very real risks of being overly exposed to China in 2022,” he added.

Other apparent concession­s included opening a datacentre in China, as well as removing an app in 2019 that allowed Hong Kong pro-democracy protesters to keep track of police.

Apple has also faced boycott threats in China as it stands in the crossfire of US-China tensions, with Beijing warning in 2020 that it could turn its citizens against the company if Washington blocked Chinese apps.

Some Chinese social media users on Thursday hailed the iPhone update as a positive step in preventing unsolicite­d messages from strangers. One Weibo user said the change would “greatly reduce the probabilit­y of iPhone users being harassed”.

A handful questioned why the function was only being rolled out on Chinese iPhones, with one Weibo commenter joking about Apple CEO Tim Cook’s friendline­ss with Beijing: “So is Tim Cook a Party member or not?”

 ?? Photograph: Mark Schiefelbe­in/AP ?? Apple has limited its AirDrop filesharin­g function for iPhone users in China.
Photograph: Mark Schiefelbe­in/AP Apple has limited its AirDrop filesharin­g function for iPhone users in China.

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