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Apple Adopts Tighter Chinese App Store Rules, Closing Foreign App Loophole

Apple has started requiring new apps to show proof of a Chinese government license in order to be listed on the China App Store, as the company joins rival app stores that adopted the policy years earlier to meet tightening state regulations (via Reuters).

iOS App Store General Feature Dock
Apple last Friday began requiring an "internet content provider (ICP) filing" from developers when they submit new apps to be published on the local App Store. An ICP filing is the state registration system required for websites to operate legally in China.

To get the license, developers must have a company in China or work with a local publisher, a requirement that has stymied take-up by a large number of foreign apps.

Most local app stores including those operated by Tencent and Huawei have adopted the filing since at least 2017, so Apple is simply falling in line with a recently updated policy that is already established in China's software publishing industry.

China already blocks the websites of many popular western social media apps like Instagram, Facebook, and YouTube, but iPhone users in China have been able to download their apps from Apple's ‌App Store‌ by using unauthorized VPN services that connect them to an internet server outside the country.

Under new rules issued in July by China's Ministry of Industry and Information Technology, Apple will no longer be able to offer such apps in its China ‌App Store‌ from next July unless the app operators are registered with the government.

Chinese officials last week reportedly told Apple staff that the company must strictly implement the rules banning unregistered foreign apps, thereby closing the loophole allowing Chinese ‌iPhone‌ users to download them. Apple was said to have been told that the new rules are needed to crack down on online scams, pornography, and the circulation of information that violates China's censorship rules.

Most foreign app operators are unlikely to register with the Chinese government, because doing so would force them to comply with data transfer and censorship requirements. This will leave Apple with no choice but to remove them or face legal sanctions.

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Tag: China

Top Rated Comments

555gallardo Avatar
33 months ago
Ah yes. Apple defending user and human rights against their respective governments.*

*Unless government money are too lucrative to refuse.
Score: 31 Votes (Like | Disagree)
33 months ago

The EU could very well be following suit, given all recent directions they are moving to.
Except it's the exact opposite of that and the EU wants Europeans to be free to do what they want with their devices. There's no censorship in the equation.
Score: 29 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Sophisticatednut Avatar
33 months ago
🤪Oh look at that…. If only Apple users had the ability to circumvent the AppStore to install apps. But the AppStore is so secure and safe from any government censorship. Apple would only remove things breaking their terms of service. Pinky promise 🤪

Imagine if side loading was possible how the government would use it to prevent freedom somehow 🤪
Score: 15 Votes (Like | Disagree)
mectojic Avatar
33 months ago
At least make a press statement where Tim Cook says "Until we get our entire production line out of China, we have to suck up to this censorial communist dictatorship".
Score: 13 Votes (Like | Disagree)
33 months ago

Ah yes. Apple defending user and human rights against their respective governments.*

*Unless government money are too lucrative to refuse.
And also requiring all apps conform to the same standards*

*Unless its Elon Musk, then he gets to do whatever he wants
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
33 months ago

The real reason for this is forcing censorship on Chinese people even when they leave China. Going on a trip, thinking you can read Twitter or watch YouTube? Not so fast! You can’t even download YouTube app.
You can of course use a browser to do all that outside China.
Score: 9 Votes (Like | Disagree)