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Apple removed the New York Times app in China. Why now?

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Apple Inc. has removed the New York Times app from its digital store in China, acting on what it says were orders from the Chinese government.

The New York Times, which offers content in both English and Chinese, is one of a growing number of foreign news organizations whose content is blocked in China, although some people use special software to bypass the censorship system.

For the record:

9:51 a.m. Nov. 25, 2024A previous version of this story incorrectly stated when New York Times reporter David Barboza made his initial contact with Apple regarding his story. It was not Dec. 23.

The newspaper said the app had been removed from Apple stores in China on Dec. 23, apparently under regulations issued last June forbidding mobile apps from engaging in activities that endanger national security or disrupt social order.

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But that occurred as New York Times reporter David Barboza was in the final stages of reporting a story about billions of dollars in hidden perks and subsidies the Chinese government provides to the world’s largest iPhone factory, run by Apple’s partner Foxconn. That story went online Dec. 29.

GreatFire.org, an anticensorship group, worked with the paper to launch a version of its Chinese-language app in July that circumvented Chinese censorship in ways that the government could not easily prevent.

It pointed out that its Chinese-language Android app continues to work unobstructed in China, while its own FreeWeibo app had earlier also been removed from the Apple store. It tweeted that, in its opinion, Apple’s moves were related to the story about subsidies for Foxconn.

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Even if the timing was a coincidence, the development underlines how U.S. information technology companies are being forced to play by China’s rules if they want to do business there — even at some cost to their reputations in the West.

It is also another example of how the noose is gradually tightening under the world’s largest system of censorship known as the Great Firewall of China.

But it also comes as China redoubles its own efforts to spread the Communist Party’s message across the world, including in the United States.

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The latest move throws up another barrier for Chinese readers, especially new customers. The New York Times app is available in Apple stores in Hong Kong and Taiwan, for example, but users need a credit card billing address outside mainland China to download it, the newspaper reported.

“For some time now the New York Times app has not been permitted to display content to most users in China and we have been informed that the app is in violation of local regulations,” Apple spokesman Fred Sainz told the paper. “As a result, the app must be taken down off the China App Store. When this situation changes, the App Store will once again offer the New York Times app for download in China.”

The Times said it had asked Apple to reconsider its decision. Criticism also rained down online.

California’s Internet companies may have once dreamed of liberating China through technology, but these days they seem more willing than ever to play the Communist Party’s game; case in point, news that Facebook Inc. is developing a censorship tool that many interpret as an attempt to get its service unblocked in China.

The news of the New York Times’ app being blocked was not reported by Chinese media, but it filtered through to a few people online.

“We are closing our doors to the outside world,” lamented one user of Weibo, China’s equivalent of Twitter.

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“This is a restoration of the Cultural Revolution or another historical retrogression,” said another.

Meanwhile, China Central Television, a propaganda arm of the Communist Party and the country’s largest TV network, launched a new global platform on New Year’s Day to try to improve China’s image overseas.

In a congratulatory letter, President Xi Jinping urged the newly launched China Global Television Network to “tell China’s story well, spread China’s voice well, let the world know a three-dimensional, colorful China, and showcase China’s role as a builder of world peace.”

The Washington Post is one of many Western newspapers that carries a regular paid supplement by China Daily, another Communist Party mouthpiece.

Denyer writes for the Washington Post.

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