Apple’s Balancing Act in China Gets Trickier During Xi’s Crackdown
- Walled-garden pioneer watching China demolish platform moats
- Company enjoys unique China position among U.S. tech giants
In less than a year, China has upended the world’s largest internet sphere, throwing its biggest players from Alibaba to Tencent into a tailspin with a storm of regulatory measures to loosen their stranglehold over data and content. Yet Apple Inc., the largest of them all and an American icon, has sailed through mostly unscathed.
That may be changing. President Xi Jinping has over the past year launched a broad offensive against Big Tech, directing the dismantling of digital walls around platforms like WeChat that stifle competition. Last month, China’s top court effectively granted consumers the right to sue Apple for alleged abuse of market power -- a setback for a company whose App Store pioneered the walled-garden model of centralizing user data and publishing control.