Apple's China controversy is the price of doing business

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Apple (AAPL) is facing continued backlash from its decision to pull two apps in response to ongoing protests in Hong Kong against the Chinese government.

The first app, HKmap.live, allowed protesters to crowdsource the location of police and barricades. The second was the app for the publication Quartz, which was pulled from the App Store in China following the publication's continued coverage of the protests.

While Apple's moves have drawn the ire of those in Hong Kong and politicians here in the U.S., Senator Josh Hawley (R-MO) questioned whether Beijing put pressure on the company to pull the HKmap.live app.

But for all of the uproar, Apple's move to pull the apps comes down to one hard truth: The company needs China, and will do what it can to prevent losing the market.

Apple needs China

The Chinese market is incredibly important for Apple. Of the $53 billion in net sales Apple did in Q3 2019, China accounted for $9.2 billion. That's well behind the Americas, but just shy of the $11.9 billion generated in Europe.

The company is also trying to stem the tide of Chinese users choosing homegrown devices from the likes of Huawei and other brands over Apple's own products.

And Apple, unlike Google, is still able to sell its various digital services including apps, and more in China. Google's Play Store, YouTube, and other offerings are banned in the country. That gives Apple all the more incentive to comply with the regime in Beijing.

This isn't the first time Apple has pulled apps from its Chinese App Store, either. The company was widely criticized for removing virtual private networking (VPN) apps from its App Store in China in 2017. That move came after China outlawed any VPNs that weren't explicitly approved by the Chinese government.

VPNs allow Chinese internet users to circumvent the government's so-called Great Firewall, a series of highly restrictive blocks that prevent citizens from accessing websites the government doesn't approve of.

The company also began hosting its iCloud storage and encryption keys for Chinese users in China in 2018. The move followed a Chinese law that required companies doing business in China to host their servers in the country.

The concern in doing that, however, was that the Chinese government would have easier access to Chinese users' data.

Apple CEO Tim Cook tours the company's re-opened flagship store in Manhattan. (Image: Howley)
Apple CEO Tim Cook tours the company's re-opened flagship store in Manhattan. (Image: Howley)

Apple's explanation

While Apple has been heavily criticized for pulling the HKmap.live app from its App Store in Hong Kong, the company says it did so out of an abundance of caution.

"The app displays police locations and we have verified with the Hong Kong Cybersecurity and Technology Crime Bureau that the app has been used 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," the company said through a spokesperson.