Apple CEO Tim Cook urged to 'reverse course' after pulling Hong Kong protest app – CNET

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In a letter to Apple CEO Tim Cook, US Congress members Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez, Mike Gallagher and Tom Malinowski criticized the tech giant’s decision to remove the Hong Kong protest app, HKmap.live, on Oct. 10. US Senators Ron Wyden, Tom Cotton and Marco Rubio also signed the letter.

“Apple’s decisions last week to accommodate the Chinese government by taking down HKMaps is deeply concerning. We urge you in the strongest terms to reverse course, to demonstrate that Apple puts values above market access, and to stand with the brave men and women fighting for basic rights and dignity in Hong Kong,” the letter said. The letter follows the app’s removal and Cook’s meeting with China’s market regulator in Beijing on Thursday, according to a report from Reuters.

Apple didn’t immediately respond to a request for comment.

Apple removed HKmap.live, a mapping app that crowdsources the location of police and protesters in Hong Kong, from the App Store, saying it violated the store’s guidelines and local laws. HKmap tweeted last Thursday that it disagreed with Apple’s claim that the app endangered law enforcement and Hong Kong residents. 

The protests, which have been going on since March 2019, were initially focused on legislation that would have allowed people arrested in Hong Kong to be transferred to and tried in mainland China. The extradition bill has since been withdrawn, but demonstrations have expanded to include other grievances and demands for greater democracy.


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source: cnet.com