What Happened: Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Mao Ning issued a statement underlining that there have been "some security incidents" involving Apple's iPhones, reported Bloomberg.
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"We notice that there have been some security incidents concerning Apple phones," said Ning during a regular press briefing. Ning did not elaborate exactly what these "security incidents" are that she refers to, so it is an open-ended statement.
No Ban On iPhones: However, Ning seemed to quell these reports, stating that there is no such iPhone ban in place.
"China has not issued laws and regulations to ban the purchase of Apple or foreign brands' phones," she said.
This seems to run contrary to the resurgence of Chinese tech giant Huawei, coinciding with the alleged iPhone ban.
Huawei launched the Mate 60 series smartphone with a new 7-nanometer chipset. After witnessing a surge in demand, Huawei reportedly increased its shipment target by 20%.
It remains to be seen if the China iPhone ban is informal now that the foreign ministry spokeswoman has denied that there is an official ban in place.
Image credits – Shutterstock
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