– Under pressure –
Cook maintained that the App Store in China remained stocked with VPN apps, including creations from developers outside that country.
A commercial VPN securely relays internet communications through a private channel, hiding it from locals networks and, potentially, censors.
“This wasn’t a choice they really wanted to make, and I’m not sure what they could have done about it,” analyst Enderle said of Apple.
“They are not doing well in China, and ticking off the leaders would certainly not help.”
Apple and Chinese censors will ultimately “face a barrage of pressures” from each other and from technology users in China, US-based internet rights group Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) said in an online post.
“If Apple makes too great a stand against China’s laws, it could be thrown out of the country,” Eva Galperin and Amul Kalia of the EFF said in post.
“But if China pushes its censorship system too hard, it will have to face the growing frustrations of its own elite.”
They reasoned that there was hope the crackdown on VPNs in China would recede when the political climate there improves.
– Android upside? –
There is a history of US internet stars being humbled in China.
Yahoo a decade ago wound up having to make amends after going along with Chinese officials demanding help some identifying pro-democracy advocates who used Yahoo online message boards.
Microsoft has been doing business in China for some 20 years, staying within guidelines set by the government.
Seven years ago, Google pulled its search engine out of mainland China in a rare stand against censors and for internet privacy.
“Google stood up and left, and now they aren’t a power in China,” Enderle said of the cost of the move.
However, the removal of VPN applications in China by Apple could ramp up the popularity of iPhone rivals powered by Google-backed Android software that lets people get apps from unofficial marketplaces.
Apple’s business model which requires users to install only approved applications, ironically, makes it easier for a regime like China to exert control, analysts point out.
Galperin and Kalia of the EFF said the Apple policy “creates a single chokepoint for free expression and privacy.”