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Apple restricts AirDrop in China following its use in protests.

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Apple has placed time restrictions on AirDrop wireless file-sharing across iPhones in China after the feature was used by protesters to share images opposing the Chinese government, Bloomberg reports.

The “Everyone” option in Airdrop is now limited to a ten-minute window for users in China. After the ten minutes have passed, AirDrop’s device-to-device sharing will switch back to “Contacts Only,” making it harder to distribute content to strangers en masse. These new time restrictions have been introduced by Apple just weeks after the service was used to spread posters opposing president Xi Jinping.

 The AirDrop restriction was included in the public release of iOS 16.1.1 on Wednesday, despite nothing about it being mentioned in the release notes. 9to5Mac readers were quick to discover that the restrictions seem limited to iPhones purchased in China.

As Bloomberg notes in its own reporting, AirDrop has often been used as a loophole to get around China’s strict online censorship. That isn’t to say that AirDrop is a bastion for free speech though as the feature has also been used nefariously, from grounding planes with fake terrorism threats, sending unsolicited nudes to strangers, and uh, grounding planes with unsolicited nudes. The wireless file-sharing system can be readily abused, and not just by folks who want to troll strangers with pictures of space sloths.

Apple has previously been criticised for implementing changes meant to appease the Chinese government — such as removing VPN apps and hiding the Taiwanese flag emoji for users based in Hong Kong and Macau. 

Apple hasn’t yet addressed why the AirDrop restrictions have only been introduced in China but has confirmed to Bloomberg that the new setting will be made available to global users “in the coming year” as a way to mitigate the receipt of unwanted files.


Read more about this at theverge.com

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Andrew Sabastian is a tech whiz who is obsessed with everything technology. Basically, he's a software and tech mastermind who likes to feed readers gritty tech news to keep their techie intellects nourished.
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