Apple's Cook optimistic that apps pulled in China will
be back
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[December 06, 2017]
HONG KONG (Reuters) - Apple
Inc is optimistic that some of its popular apps removed from its China
App Store this year to comply with government requests will be
reinstated, the U.S. tech giant's Chief Executive Tim Cook said on
Wednesday.
Cook, speaking at the Fortune Forum in the southern Chinese city of
Guangzhou, also stressed that he believes strongly in freedoms, in
comments after a U.S. democratic senator's remarks on Tuesday that Apple
had a moral obligation to promote free expression.
Apple is facing criticism from local users and rights groups for bowing
to pressure from Beijing cyber regulators after it decided to remove
dozens of apps from its Chinese store this year, including messaging
apps and virtual private network (VPN) services, which help users
subvert China's Great Firewall.
"My hope over time is that some of the things, the couple of things
that's been pulled, come back. I have great hope on that and great
optimism on that," Cook said, adding that he always tries to find areas
to work together and if he gets criticized for that, so be it.
App stores run by Apple and Alphabet Inc's Google generate billions of
dollars in revenue globally for them and China is a key target market as
its users rely heavily on their phones for daily tasks ranging from
grocery shopping to booking nail appointments.
Cook said he couldn't be happier with how the iPhone X is doing in
China, Apple's third-largest region by sales although it has lost market
share there in recent years as high-end handsets from local rivals
continue to gain traction.
Tencent Holdings, China's biggest social network and gaming company, was
a great partner, Cook said, adding that he thinks very highly of its
founder, Pony Ma.
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Tim Cook, CEO of Apple, demonstrates an iPhone following a launch
event in Cupertino, California, U.S. September 12, 2017.
REUTERS/Stephen Lam/File Photo
Apple and Tencent had a spat earlier this year after Tencent launched mini
programs on its WeChat app, which created an ecosystem of apps within the app
and threatened to become an operating system of its own.
The two companies are seen to have made peace recently, with the Apple China App
Store starting to accept WeChat payments from late August.
Tencent founder and chairman Ma, who spoke at the same forum immediately after
Cook, said WeChat, with its mini-programs, could be the starting point to build
a future where there are no more apps.
Many of the top games on Apple's China App Store are made by Tencent, which
creates value for both firms.
Cook said Apple welcomes the WeChat ecosystem as it in fact lowers the cost for
Android users to switch to the iPhone's iOS system, which he said has around 15
percent of the smartphone market in China.
"Tencent’s ubiquity in China plays to our advantage. Because WeChat works great
on the iPhone, and because you can leave the Android ecosystem and go to iOS
without losing all of the things you’ve built," he said.
(Reporting By Sijia Jiang and Anne Marie Roantree; Editing by Muralikumar
Anantharaman)
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