removing virtual private network (VPN) services from its app store in China, drawing criticism from VPN service providers, who accuse the U.S. tech giant of bowing to pressure from Beijing cyber regulators.
VPNs allow users to bypass China's so-called "Great Firewall" aimed at restricting access to overseas sites.
In
January, Beijing passed laws seeking to ban all VPNs that are not
approved by state regulators. Approved VPNs must use state network
infrastructure.
In a statement on Sunday, an
Apple spokeswoman confirmed it will remove apps that don't comply with
the law from its China App Store, including services based outside the
country.
Beijing has shut down dozens of
China-based providers and it has been targeting overseas services as it
bids to tighten its control over the internet, especially ahead of the
Communist Party congress in August.
While
personal VPN providers have been the subject of state-led attacks in the
past, this marks the first time Apple has complied with requests to
scrub overseas providers from its store, a move that VPN providers say
is unnecessarily supportive of China's heightened censorship regime.
VPN
provider ExpressVPN said on Saturday that it had received a notice from
Apple that its software would be removed from the China App Store
"because it includes content that is illegal in China".
"We're
disappointed in this development, as it represents the most drastic
measure the Chinese government has taken to block the use of VPNs to
date, and we are troubled to see Apple aiding China's censorship
efforts," ExpressVPN said in a statement.
Other major providers, including VyprVPN and StarVPN, confirmed they also received the notice on Saturday from Apple.
"We
view access to Internet in China as a human rights issue and I would
expect Apple to value human rights over profit," Sunday Yokubaitis,
president of Golden Frog, which oversees VyprVPN told Reuters on Sunday.
Yokubaitis said Golden Frog will file an appeal to Apple over the ban.
China
users with billing addresses in other countries will still be able to
access VPN apps from other branches of the App Store. A number of VPN
apps were still accessible on the China App store on Saturday.
Apple
is in the middle of a localization drive in China, and named a new
managing director for the region - a new role - this month.
It
is also establishing a data center with a local partner in the
southwestern province of Guizhou to comply with new Chinese cloud
storage regulations.
VPN providers say that
while the apps are not available on the store, users are still able to
manually install them using VPN support built into Apple's operating
system.
"We are extremely disappointed that Apple has bowed to
pressure," said Yokubaitis. "(It's been a) disappointing morning but we
will fight on."
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