Apple on Wednesday has removed from its App Store an app that helps protesters in Hong Kong track police activities, two days after Chinese state-run newspaper the Peopleโ€™s Daily blasted the tech giant for helping pro-democracy protesters.

Why it matters: Apple is the latest foreign company to be caught in the rising tide of Chinese nationalism amid the months-long anti-government protests in Hong Kong after allowing the HKmap.live app on its App Store last week.

  • Some Chinese tech companies, including Tencent and Alibaba, have suspended ties with the National Basketball Association this week following a tweet from a Houston Rockets executive in support of the Hong Kong protests.
  • On Tuesday, the Peopleโ€™s Daily said in a commentary (in Chinese) that by allowing the app, Apple was โ€œassisting rioters in Hong Kongโ€ and sought to be an โ€œaccessoryโ€ of protesters.

Details: The real-time map, which was officially launched in early August, shows a map of Hong Kong with crowd-sourced updates on the location of police, as well as water cannons and tear gas deployment.

  • In a statement on Thursday, Apple said the app had been used โ€œin ways that endanger law enforcement and residents in Hong Kong.โ€
  • The company said that Hong Kongโ€™s Cyber Security and Technology Crime Bureau (CSTCB) verified the app was being โ€œused to target and ambush police, threaten public safety, and criminals have used it to victimize residents in areas where they know there is no law enforcement.โ€
  • โ€œThis app violates our guidelines and local laws, and we have removed it from the App Store,โ€ said Apple.
  • The appโ€™s developer said on Twitter that it disagrees with Apple and the CSTCBโ€™s claim that the HKmap.live endangers law enforcement and residents in Hong Kong, saying the move was a political decision to suppress freedom and human rights in Hong Kong.

Context: Apple has a history of acquiescing to the strict internet regulations in China, the companyโ€™s second-largest market after the United States.

  • The company has removed hundreds of apps from the Chinese App Store in recent years, including those from The New York Times in 2017 and news outlet Quartz this week.
  • Earlier this month, Apple removed the Taiwanese flag emoji from its iPhone keyboard for users in Hong Kong in a recent update of its iOS operating system.

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