People look at the new iPhone15 Pro as it goes on sale across China at an Apple store in Shanghai. Photo: Reuters
Apple’s App Store was not seen on a list from China’s cyberspace regulator announcing the first batch of mobile app stores that have completed filing business details as part of new rules.
China now requires mobile app stores and mobile apps to submit business details to the government, as part of Beijing’s expanding oversight of smartphone and mobile app usage over the past several years.
A total of 26 app stores operated by companies including Tencent, Huawei, Ant Group, Baidu, Xiaomi and Samsung have submitted filings to the authority, the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) said.
Beijing’s push to tighten scrutiny over apps came into focus when in June last year the CAC issued a new rule requiring app stores to submit business details. The regulator said it would hold app stores accountable if apps contain illegal content.
In August this year, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology published another notice requiring mobile apps to complete filings by the end of March.
The list released on Wednesday signalled Beijing has now begun to enforce those new rules.
The regulations are causing consternation in the industry that publishing apps in the world’s second largest economy will become very difficult and could lead to the takedown of many apps.
Apple has not disclosed how its app store in China will comply with Beijing’s new rules. Experts say Apple’s compliance could lead to the removal of tens of thousands of apps from the US smartphone giant’s App Store in China.
Meanwhile, earlier this month, app stores operated by companies including Tencent and Huawei started demanding apps on their app stores comply with the new rules.
The US carmaker sold 82,432 of its Shanghai gigafactory-produced vehicles last month as rival BYD…
Cyclone Michaung was sweeping down India’s eastern coast, closing Chennai’s airport and sweeping cars away…
Chinese indexes saw double digit falls in the number of IPOs, compared to last year,…
Hedge funds rotated their positions to developed Asia markets, including Hong Kong, Singapore and Japan
Chinese President Xi Jinping will meet with European Council President Charles Michel and European Commission…
The number of Chinese blacklisted for defaulting on debts has hit a record high, which…