Apple won approval to sell the phones after also addressing risks
of personal information leaks related to the operating system's
diagnostic tools, China's Ministry of Industry and Information
Technology (MIIT) said on its website on Tuesday.
The iPhone 6 and 6 Plus were released on Sept 19 in the United
States and elsewhere, but regulatory delay meant Chinese consumers
had to wait. The initial lack of a China launch date caught analysts
by surprise because of Apple's repeated comments about the
importance of the world's biggest smartphone market.
Apple and other American technology companies have been subject to
greater scrutiny in China after former U.S. National Security Agency
contractor Edward Snowden last year revealed spying and surveillance
campaigns, including programs that obtained private data through
U.S. technology firms.
In July, Chinese state media accused Apple of providing user data to
U.S. agencies and called for 'severe punishment'. Apple responded by
publicly denying the existence of backdoors.
The notice of approval for the iPhone 6 could potentially mark the
ministry's first for a specific smartphone, suggesting Apple is
subject to more scrutiny than its peers in a year in which the U.S.
tech giant will release a new phone on all three of China's major
mobile networks for the first time.
BACKDOORS
The MIIT said it conducted "rigorous security testing" on the iPhone
6 and held talks with Apple on the issue, and that Apple shared with
the ministry materials related to the potential security issues.
One of the concerns the MIIT raised was over a third party's ability
to take control of a computer that had been given trusted access to
the phone by a user. They also queried Apple on the ability of staff
repairing iPhones to access user data through background services.
Apple told the MIIT it had adopted new security measures in its
latest smartphone operating system, iOS 8, and promised that it had
never installed backdoors into its products or services to allow
access for any government agency in any country, the MIIT said.
Apple earlier this month was hiring a head of law enforcement in
Beijing to deal with user data requests from China's government,
after it last month began storing private data on Chinese soil for
the first time.
1.27 BILLION SUBSCRIBERS
With regulatory approval from the world's largest smartphone market,
analysts expect the iPhone 6 and 6 Plus to sell well in China, where
many people prefer phones with larger screens.
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The phone will be made available on all three of China's state-owned
wireless carriers: China Mobile Ltd, China Unicom Hong Kong
Ltd and China Telecom Corp Ltd. Together, the three had more than
1.27 billion mobile subscribers in August.
"iPhone 6 and iPhone 6 Plus customers will have access to high-speed
mobile networks from China Mobile, China Telecom and China Unicom,"
Apple Chief Executive Tim Cook said in a press release on Tuesday.
The iPhone 6 will be available in gold, silver and gray with a
suggested retail price of 5,288 yuan ($860.16) for the cheapest
model with 16GB of storage. The iPhone 6 Plus, in the same colors,
will be 6,088 yuan ($990.29) for the cheapest model, also with 16GB
of storage. The most expensive iPhone 6 Plus with 128GB storage will
be 7,788 yuan ($1,266.82).
The phones will also be available online and by reservation from
Apple stores.
Apple sold a record 10 million iPhone 6 handsets in the first
weekend after their launch, which excluded China. Last year, the
U.S. tech firm sold 9 million iPhone 5S and 5C models in 11
countries, including China, in the same period.
The Cupertino, California-based company said iPhone sales in China
grew 50 percent during in April-June from a year earlier,
effectively salvaging an otherwise lackluster quarter. The strong
sales came despite signs that Chinese consumers were waiting for the
next-generation iPhone 6, analysts said.
(1 US dollar = 6.1477 Chinese yuan)
(Additional reporting by Beijing Newsroom; Editing by Miral Fahmy
and Christopher Cushing)
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