Apple working with Chinese telecom firms to reduce spam:
state media
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[August 02, 2018] BEIJING
(Reuters) - Apple Inc is working with Chinese telecom firms to find ways
to reduce spam received through its messaging service, days after it was
accused by state media of allowing illegal content on its platform,
China News Service reported on Thursday.
The iPhone maker has been targeted by China's state media through the
past week and the official state broadcaster railed against it in a
30-minute special report on Tuesday, saying Apple allowed illegal
content such as gambling apps.
Apple is exploring ways to cut spam messages, including using advanced
technology to identify junk messages and rolling out more tools to block
hostile accounts, an Apple official was quoted by the state-run China
News Service as saying.
"We've been working to reduce the issue of spam for quite some time," an
Apple spokeswoman told Reuters in an email.
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She declined to comment on the China News Service report that it was
working with the country's telecom firms.
China is Apple's second-largest market and it said earlier this week
that revenue in the country jumped 19 percent in the June quarter on
strong iPhone X sales, showing investors it still had game even as
cheaper Chinese rivals gain ground.
Beijing has criticized Apple before but the fresh attacks come as
Chinese regulators have launched a new campaign to clean up spam and
unsolicited calls, which are a pervasive issue in China where phone
numbers are often sold on black markets.
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A man looks at the screen of his mobile phone in front of an Apple
logo outside its store in Shanghai, China on July 30, 2017. REUTERS/Aly
Song/File Photo
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The criticism highlights an increasingly fraught balancing act for the firm in
the world's biggest smartphone market at a time of mounting trade tensions
between China and the United States. Both countries have imposed tariffs on
exported goods and are fighting over patents and technology.
While China is limited in its ability to match tariff for tariff, it has stepped
up scrutiny of business dealings involving U.S. firms including Facebook Inc and
recently scuppered a deal between U.S. chipmakers Qualcomm Inc and NXP
Semiconductors.
Alphabet Inc's Google, which quit China's search engine market in 2010, will
block some websites and search terms from the version of its search engine that
it plans to launch in China, two sources have told Reuters.
(Reporting by Beijing Monitoring Desk and Brenda Goh; Writing by Sayantani Ghosh;
Editing by Sunil Nair and Himani Sarkar)
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