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Tag: China

  • Foxconn Raises Worker Pay By Up To 25%

    Apple’s manufacturing arm in China is making a PR push, saying on Friday that they have raised the wages of their workers by 16-25% this month.

    “As a top manufacturing company in China, the basic salary of junior workers in all of Foxconn’s China factories is already far higher than the minimum wage set by all local governments,” the company said in a statement. “We will provide more training opportunities and learning time, and will continuously enhance technology, efficiency and salary, so as to set a good example for the Chinese manufacturing industry.”

    A junior level worker in a Foxconn factory has been raised to 1,800 yuan a month, which is about $290. They say that the salary can even be raised to 2,200 yuan a month if the worker “passes a technical examination.”

    Apple has been under fire recently due to some troubling reports about working conditions at Foxconn. First, there were reports of worker suicides and narrowly-avoided suicides at some plants. Then, investigations into the treatment of workers at the plant by some, including the New York Times, noted long working hours without breaks, safety issues, and other concerns for worker health. A former Foxconn manager spoke out, saying that “Apple never cared about anything other than increasing product quality and decreasing production cost.”

    Apple CEO Tim Cook denied that Apple condoned the mistreatment of workers, saying that “any suggestion that we don’t care is patently false and offensive to us. As you know better than anyone, accusations like these are contrary to our values. It’s not who we are.”

    Apple announced earlier this week that they were partnering up with the Fair Labor Association to begin conducting a series of audits into Foxconn facilities. Surprisingly, initial reports from the FLA suggest that the conditions at some part of the factories at least were “above average.”

    So Foxconn raised wages by quite a bit – I mean, a 25%(or even 16% for that matter) raise is gigantic. But for a low-level worker, $3,500 a year is not exactly rolling in it.

  • iPhone Losing Market Share In China

    iPhone Losing Market Share In China

    While Apple enjoys considerable success in the sale of its iPhone around the world, the Chinese market has proven a particularly tough nut to crack. Overall, Apple has had an amazing year: they sold more iOS devices in 2011 than Macs in 28 years. In the last quarter of 2011 Apple’s iPhone business alone generated more revenue than Microsoft’s entire business. The iPhone even surpassed OS X in web market share in the last quarter. And yet, in the country where the iPhone is actually built, China, Apple’s share of the smartphone market fell.

    In fact, Apple fell from fourth place to fifth place in the Chinese smartphone market. Chinese-based ZTE Corporation passed Apple to take fourth place in the world’s largest mobile phone market. The top three spots are occupied by Samsung, Nokia, and Huawei Technologies, another Chinese-based company.

    Much of Apple’s difficulty apparently stems from the cost of the device, which is as much as two months’ salary for many Chinese workers. Apple’s market share in China fell from 10.4 percent in the third quarter of 2011 to 7.5 percent in the fourth quarter. The iPhone is currently only available through one Chinese mobile carrier, China Unicom, though Apple reportedly is working to bring the iPhone to China Telecom, the country’s smallest mobile carrier.

  • Chinese iPad Trademark Could Halt Global Sales

    Chinese iPad Trademark Could Halt Global Sales

    Proview International Holdings is a company in China known for their CRT and LCD monitors. They also own the iPad trademark in China which is causing a bit of trouble for Apple.

    Since Proview owns the iPad trademark in China, they can do what they want with it. Apple is fighting them in China over the use of the name, but so far, it’s not working very well in their favor. To add even graver wounds to injury, Proview is asking for a block of all iPad imports and exports.

    In a statement to Bloomberg, Proview’s lawyer, Roger Xie, said that they are unable to reach an agreement with Apple which has led to the surprising move to attempt a block of iPad exports from the country.

    “We are applying to customs to stop any trademark- infringing products from imports to China and also for exports,” Xie said. “Apple wants to postpone and continue infringement of the iPad in China.”

    Carolyn Wu, Apple’s Beijin spokeswoman, said that Apple bought Proview’s worldwide rights to the iPad trademark in 10 countries, including China.

    “Proview refuses to honor their agreement with Apple in China,” Wu said. “Our case is still pending in mainland China.”

    If Proview is granted the export ban, it would be a major blow to Apple as all iPads are made in China. This increases the pressure on Apple to just settle instead of trying to fight since Proview has the home court advantage.

    While it seems that this whole mess started recently, it’s actually a pretty old fight between the two tech companies. Apple sued Proview back in 2010 over the iPad trademark. Apple took the case to the Shenzhen Intermediate People’s Court where they rejected Apple’s claim to the iPad trademark. Apple is now appealing that decisioin to the Higher People’s Court of Guangdong province.

    Proview fired back with a trademark infringement case against Apple in Shanghai in an attempt to halt iPad sales in Apple’s stores in China. The case is scheduled to begin February 22.

    Proview separately filed trademark infringement complaints with 20 local government agencies. Those officials have begun seizing iPads in local markets according to Xie.

    Proview has yet to set a final claim amount, but initial reports are pegging it at 10 billion yuan, or $1.6 billion.

    If Apple and Proview can’t reach an agreement, expect very interesting things from the iPad maker.

  • FLA And Apple Conduct Audits Of Final Assembly

    Today, Apple announced that the Fair Labor Association will begin conducting a series of special audits at Foxconn’s Chinese final assembly plants. Per Apple’s request, the FLA will be inspecting plant safety, process documents, factory and dormitory conditions, working hours, and management practices. The inspections will encompass Foxconn facilities in Shenzhen and Chengdu, China where nearly 90% of Apple products are assembled.

    Apple CEO, Tim Cook comments on the audits:

    “We believe that workers everywhere have the right to a safe and fair work environment, which is why we’ve asked the FLA to independently assess the performance of our largest suppliers,”

    “The inspections now underway are unprecedented in the electronics industry, both in scale and scope, and we appreciate the FLA agreeing to take the unusual step of identifying the factories in their reports.”

    Since 2006, Apple has regularly performed audits of their manufacturing partners facilities, but the current FLA partnership appears to be motivated by recent claims of abuse at the Foxconn factories in China and a rising call for action by supporters of the Apple brand.

  • Kim Jong-Un Is Not Dead According To U.S. Official

    Kim Jong-Un Is Not Dead According To U.S. Official

    We reported Friday that Twitter and Weibo exploded with rumors that North Korea’s new leader Kim Jong-Un had been killed in an assassination attempt. It turns out that those reports were just untrue.

    A U.S. official told CNN that there was no evidence to back up the rumors of the North Korean leader’s death. At the time, they said it’s hard to say for sure due to the country’s secrecy, but it was highly unlikely.

    What did happen at the North Korean embassy then that caused such a ruckus in the first place? It apparently was a birthday party. The National Post is reporting that the large amount of cars all parked at the embassy were for the 70th birthday party of the late Kim Jong-Il. Chinese citizens were apparently not used to seeing so many people at the embassy and just assumed the worst.

    Twitter has mostly stopped talking about Kim Jong-Un now that a real celebrity has died, but some people are still taking time out to make a few more observations.

    Remember when we all thought Kim Jong Un died? We meant Whitney Houston. We were so close!(image) 15 hours ago via Twitter for iPhone ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Annoyed to see my so called friend, Kim Jong Un has been spreading rumors of his death to avoid returning my Grey’s Anatomy DVDs(image) 1 day ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    According to Kim Jong-Un, a Weibo user has been assassinated.(image) 4 minutes ago via web ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Going offline for a bit to get some work done. Someone text me if Greece has a revolution, and/or Kim Jong Un actually dies.(image) 27 minutes ago via Twitter for BlackBerry® ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    Man I would have much rather the rumors of Kim Jong Un have been true than Whitney. Is that wrong?(image) 26 minutes ago via TweetDeck ·  Reply ·  Retweet ·  Favorite · powered by @socialditto

    [Lead image once again courtesy of the excellent Kim Jong-Un Looking At Things]

  • Is Foxconn Really Helping The Chinese Economy Or Are They Evil?

    There are many who believe that corporations like Foxconn are evil. Apple contracts components from them and they turn around and pinch pennies while their employees are slaving away for long hours, working with hazardous chemicals, taking no breaks, and receiving very little compensation. This is our perspective here in America, isn’t it?

    Images of factory worker abuse have been around since long before any of us were born. If you think about the industrial revolution in America, you will realize that the modern society we enjoy today was built in the backs of exploited factory workers. While it is true that this may not be a necessary evil, it is an evil many societies have had to endure in the name of building a stronger nation.

    Remember when “made in Japan” conjured negative images in our heads? I do, and I don’t believe that is the case anymore. Today, Japan is highly regarded for its machinery and transportation exports. Singapore, Hong Kong, Taiwan, and South Korea have all followed suit and used sweatshop tactics to build their economies. Essentially these nations were hungry and wanted to grow. Some business is better than no business and revenue, regardless of how it’s generated, builds the infrastructure and social programs that characterize a developed nation.

    In china citizens flock to employment agencies to except Foxconn jobs because they are not presented with many other viable options for earning a paycheck to feed their families and keep clothing on their backs. Hopefully, none of us want to see others suffer, but we have been blessed in this country because, our forefathers did the work for us. We have the government resources to protect us from employer abuse because, somewhere along the way, somebody sacrificed so we could have it.

    Since 1979 when China decided to embraced capitalism nearly 600 million people have escaped starvation and poverty by choosing to take employment in sweatshop-like environments. A perfect example is the Chinese village of Shenzhen. They were one of the first areas to embrace China’s economic reforms and to begin growing the economy. Thirty years later it is a city of 10 million people and a hotbed for manufacturing jobs.

    If we take a lesson from history we can conclude that China is progressing very quickly and we may soon begin to see breakthroughs in the way they do business. I think America has a habit of forcing our politics onto other nations before they are ready for them. Sometimes you just need to allow something the freedom to grow and choose its own path.

    Consumers should realize that a forced change over in China will end in one of two ways. Either Apple will pull all of their contracts from China over the labor disputes and Chinese workers will be left with no jobs or Americans will have to suffer tremendous price increases. Is an iPod worth $800-$1200 to you? Will you pay $1600- $2500 for an iPad? That’s what manufacturing in developed nations costs and it will be passed on to the consumer.

  • Foxconn Hiring, Thousands Clamor For Jobs

    Foxconn Hiring, Thousands Clamor For Jobs

    Chinese manufacturer Foxconn is in the process of doubling their workforce in places like the city of Zhengzhou, and despite all of the recent controversy surrounding working conditions at Foxconn factories, tons of Chinese workers are rushing to grab a job.

    Chinese Apple site Mic Gadget reports that on Monday, thousands of people looking for jobs lined up outside a labor office in the largest city in Henan province, all looking to be hired on at Foxconn.

    They discuss what could be the draw of a Foxconn job:

    Well, these people saw the job advertisement posted by the Zhengzhou government in the city which showed the salary at Foxconn’s Zhengzhou factory is 1650 yuan (US$261) for basic salary, and the salary would be increased to 2400 – 3200 yuan (US$379-$506) after the appraisal. What’s more, workers do not need to pay additional money for dormitory and food. Foxconn incorporates the food and housing allowance into the basic salary. So, this attracted thousands of young job seekers to deliver their resumes to the Foxconn representatives.

    Apparently, the crowd was heavily swayed toward males and most had prior work experience. A smaller subset of the applicants were described as recent college grads.

    Of course, the Apple manufacturer has been the subject of public scrutiny as of late regarding worker conditions inside its factories. Foxconn has been accused of worker abuses, including witholding pay, forcing long hours with no breaks, and providing unsafe conditions. One Chinese executive from a Foxconn parent company raised eyebrows by comparing his workers to animals. Then there are those horrific stories of suicides at the plants.

    Apple has denied that they were aware of these abuses and have stated emphatically that they care about every worker in their supply chain. CEO Tim Cook said that he was “offended” by the allegations, saying “we care about every worker in our worldwide supply chain. Any accident is deeply troubling, and any issue with working conditions is cause for concern. Any suggestion that we don’t care is patently false and offensive to us.”

    But it looks like Chinese workers are lining up in droves for work at the plants. One might think that this hints that conditions might not be as bad as some have reported, but Mic Gadget has some pretty harsh words about the Foxconn factories:

    The long lines at the labour agency may have surprised some, considering the harsh working conditions at Foxconn’s factories. No matter how poor the working conditions are, we can still see lots of Chinese willing to work at the hell factory to assemble the tech gadgets we’re using today. God bless them.

    Foxconn is probably ramping up hiring to deal with the production of new Apple devices like the iPhone 5. Earlier, we told you about an online petition about protecting Chinese workers that has been gaining a hell of a lot of steam on Change.org. With all of the recent news about worker conditions in these factories, it’s safe to say that many Apple lovers will look at the iPhone 5 in a way that they probably didn’t look at their original iPhone.

  • Online Petition Tackles Apple Factory Worker Conditions

    Online Petition Tackles Apple Factory Worker Conditions

    A petition on popular online petition site Change.org is gaining a lot of attention. Washington D.C.’s Mark Shields is petitioning Apple (and specifically CEO Tim Cook) to “Protect Workers Making iPhones in Chinese Factories.”

    In just a few days, the petition has amassed 146,000+ signatures as of the writing of this article, and it’s progressing at an astonishing rate.

    Dear Apple,

    You know what’s awesome? Listening to NPR podcasts through an Apple Airport, playing through a Mac laptop, while puttering about the kitchen. Do you know the fastest way to replace awesome with a terrible knot in your stomach? Learning that your beloved Apple products are made in factories where conditions are so bad, it’s not uncommon for workers to permanently lose the use of their hands.

    For awhile now, Apple has been plagued by a pretty disturbing PR crisis. Conditions inside some of their foreign manufacturing plants have been called into question – especially factories like Foxconn in China. In the past year, we’ve heard reports of mass suicides of workers at Foxconn, and just this month we reported on a mass suicide threat that was just barely avoided.

    Just a couple of weeks ago, the chairman of Hon Hai, parent company to Foxconn, raised some eyebrows when he referred to the workers under his management as “animals.”

    These foreign factories have been accused of numerous abuses, including refusal of pay, a lack of breaks, and improper instruction regarding toxic chemicals. A former Foxconn manager recently spoke out, saying that “Apple never cared about anything other than increasing product quality and decreasing production cost.”

    For his part, Apple CEO Tim Cook has publicly refuted these claims, saying that he takes offense to the notion that he doesn’t care about all the workers under the Apple umbrella:

    As a company and as individuals, we are defined by our values. Unfortunately some people are questioning Apple’s values today, and I’d like to address this with you directly. We care about every worker in our worldwide supply chain. Any accident is deeply troubling, and any issue with working conditions is cause for concern. Any suggestion that we don’t care is patently false and offensive to us. As you know better than anyone, accusations like these are contrary to our values. It’s not who we are.

    Nevertheless, here’s what is demanded by the petition:

    Here are two simple asks (basically taken from the end of the TAL report) that could make a profound difference in the lives of the men and women in your factories and others like them:

    First, in regards to the worker traumas described in the story, ranging from suicide attempts to the people losing the use of their hands from repetitive motion injuries, we ask that Apple release a worker protection strategy for new product releases, which are the instances when injuries and suicides typically spike because of the incredible pressure to meet quotas timed to releases.

    Second, since the TAL story aired, Apple has announced that the Fair Labor Association will be monitoring its suppliers. Awesome step. Please publish the results of FLA’s monitoring, including the NAMES of the suppliers found to have violations and WHAT those violations are, so that there is transparency around the monitoring effort.

    Please make these changes immediately, so that each of us can once again hold our heads high and say, “I’m a Mac person.”

    150,000 signatures in a few days is a highly successful petition. It seems that the issue isn’t just going to go away. It’s hard for people to look at their devices that they rely on and love so much and think about the possible suffering that went into their construction.

    But the real question when it comes to this issue: would people really change their purchasing habits? What do you think? Let us know in the comments.

    [Image Courtesy cultofmac]

  • China: An Efficient Manufacturer Of Pollution

    In the 1970’s we started outsourcing production from the United Staes to overseas facilities that could meet production demands faster and cheaper. After over forty years of outsourcing, one thing is clear: Our air and waterways are a lot less polluted.

    Now shocking news from China says, their air quality is terrible! How could that be? Apparently, China has been spreading propoganda about the air quality and its’ improvement for years! Recent pressures have forced officials to face the truth and at least begin addressing the problem.

    It is also worthy to note that there’s a discrepancy, according to Chinese officials, over standards of measure, to determine if China even has a pollution problem. Perhaps the picture below will shed some light on the situation:

    (image)

    Seems very nice! The illustrious Ministry of Environmental Protection in China finally noticed this horrible smog and has made the recommendation that about 120 of China’s major cities should begin to monitor the smog by next year. Way to take action! By monitoring the pollution it will most certainly subside.

    Just last week Beijing started publishing readings of the smog, which they have been taking hourly. An official at the Institute of Public and Environmental Affairs (a Beijing-based nonprofit) credits the public with recognizing the problem, as it appears most at the institution have been robbed of their sight.

    Apparently the smog is so thick and concentrated that it can become imbedded in people’s lungs and cause a variety of respiratory complications including death. The American Embassy began monitoring the levels and alerting the public about the pollution some time ago.

    This angered the Chinese government, who politely asked the embassy to stop, and lie about it for them, if they could. The embassy declined.

    Supposedly, China has been making progress on reducing air pollution, but that is their own claim, not an impartial party’s. The World Bank mentions, in an unreleased report, Northern China’s pollution levels exceed America’s limits by five to six times.

  • Foxconn: Workers Are Animals

    Foxconn: Workers Are Animals

    Foxconn thinks their workers are animals. No, really.

    Want China Times is reporting that the chairman of Hon Hai, parent company of Foxconn, invited the director of the Taipei Zoo, Chin Shih-chien, to talk about the management of animals. Foxconn, if you remember, is the company that manufactures all those pretty iPads, Xbox 360s and Nintendo Wiis.

    “Hon Hai has a workforce of over one million worldwide and as human beings are also animals, to manage one million animals gives me a headache,” Hon Hai chairman Terry Gou said.

    Gou invited the zoo director to speak at the company’s annual review meeting. He also asked all of the general managers to listen to the lecture. He apparently wanted them to learn how to manage a wide variety of animals and their various quirks.

    While Chin was lecturing, sharing his experiences at the zoo, Gou was attentive and listening carefully. He then asked Chin to put himself in his shoes as chairman which reportedly garnered laughter from the managers.

    Even if the method was unorthodox and demeaning, Want China Times says that Gou was sincere as his company faces a crisis with handling their workers.

    Foxconn has had trouble in the past with worker suicides and worker threats that even reportedly shut down the manufacturing of Xbox 360s during the mass suicide threat last week.

    Want China Times says that China is no longer the cheap labor camp it once was and that companies like Hon Hai and Foxconn will have to work on bettering their work conditions for those workers who won’t take low wages and terrible conditions just to improve their family’s condition.

    With more and more people in the West becoming aware of the sacrifices and conditions that people go through to make shiny new iPads and other gadgets, those changes may come sooner than later.

  • China Loves Their Weibo

    Twitter may be blocked in China, but that’s not stopping the citizens from sending 140 characters or less messages.

    Reuters is reporting that the use of microblogging (i.e. Twitter) has quadrupled in 2011 compared to 2010. A government Internet think tank said today that nearly half of all Chinese Internet users are taking to the near-instant service to gather news and spread views.

    China’s version of Twitter, Weibo, has two popular platforms being run in the country by Sina Corp and Tencent Holdings. Both firms claim to have more than 200 million users accessing their service.

    Last year was a huge year for the service as users took to Weibo to discuss events such as the Wenzhou high-speed train crash in July.

    The rise in the use of these services caused a stir in the government and they feared that they may be losing their control of information. This led to the government regulating the services by requiring all users to register with their real names.

    The new rules didn’t deter users from taking to the service though. The total number of Weibo users rose 296 percent to 249.9 million in 2011. The data came from the China Internet Network Information Center which showed that half of the Chinese Internet population uses Weibo.

    The same group said that China’s Internet population had risen to 513 million users. That makes up 38.3 percent of the population is on the Internet.

    To put things into perspective, the U.S. population is projected to be at 312 million this month. The U.S. had 239 million Internet users for 77.3 percent of the population in 2010.

  • Questionable Chaos, Eggs Break Out At iPhone 4S Release In China

    Question: What gets Apple fans really excited? Announcing that they can buy the newest iPhone.

    Question: What gets Apple fans really livid? Announcing that they can’t buy the newest iPhone.

    This was the social experiment that unfolded today in Beijing, where Apple had planned to launch the iPhone 4S to China. But after getting a little stage fright due to the enormity of the eager crowd, Apple pulled the plug on the launch two hours before the release and postponed the release of the iPhone.

    Tsk, tsk, Apple. You may giveth the iPhone, but you may certainly not taketh away.

    The Daily Mail reports that after the crowd was informed that Apple would not be selling them the iPhone 4S, people took up my personally favorite way of expressing their outrage by throwing eggs at the Apple Store. Check out footage of the outraged would-be Apple customers in the following video provided by Reuters:

    The iPhone 4S was apparently still sold in other stores throughout China today where crowds were presumably less intense and less egg-armed.

    In a statement released to Reuters yesterday, Apple said that it has halted sales of the iPhone 4S altogether in Beijing and Shanghai “to ensure the safety of our customers and our employees.” Perhaps The following YouTube video allegedly of the “chaos” at the Apple Store although I think it may be satire:

    This additional video, though, does show somebody, here described as a security guard, getting smacked around by some members of the crowd:

    Mic Gadget is saying that a fight did break out but that it was between scalpers who got pissed about their lack of iPhone 4Ss to hawk. The New York Times is reporting that “an army of scalpers hired migrant workers to snap up products” such as the iPhone so that the scalpers can then flip the product on the black market.

    Honestly, we’ll probably never know really how all this trouble jumped off in Beijing, but whoever started the mini-riot redeems one imperishable maxim: a few bad apples spoil the bunch.

  • [Exclusive] Google: Our position on China remains unchanged

    A Google spokesperson tells WebProNews, “Our position on China remains unchanged.”

    That’s just in case there was any confusion from the Wall Street Journal report “Google Softens Tone on China”.

    It’s hard to believe it’s been two years since Google threatened to pull out of China, before ultimately redirecting Google.cn to its Hong Kong site. Google assures us the redirect will remain in place.

    It’s not as if Google has completely abandoned China. The company reportedly has over 500 employees there (though it was closer to 700 before Google pulled search out). According to the Wall Street Journal now, however, Google is looking to ramp up its presence in the country, focusing on products that don’t bring censorship from the Chinese government – especially Android. The report says Google is hiring more engineers, salespeople and product managers in the country.

    The publication interviewed Google’s top exec in Asia, Daniel Alegre, who reportedly says one of the company’s goals is to introduce the Android Market to the Chinese market, in addition to beefing up its product search service.

    Google has been pretty up front about the need to remain in China since pulling the search engine out of the country. Alan Eustace, Google’s SVP of Engineering Research called China the “heart” of the future of the Internet in late 2010.

    It does appear that Google considers China to be an incredibly important market, and the search censorship issue is an unfortunate obstacle, particularly as Google integrates its products with one another. The more Google expands in China, the greater this problem could become.

  • Mass Suicide At Foxconn Barely Avoided

    Foxconn, the Chinese manufacturer of Apple products and game consoles, has had a rough time with worker suicides and reports of bad employee treatment. Well, it just got worse.

    Kotaku is reporting that on January 2, over 300 employees at a Foxconn plant in Wuhan, China threatened to throw themselves off the roof of the building in a mass suicide. The workers manufacture the Xbox 360 console.

    According to the Chinese anti-government Web site China Jasmine Revolution, the workers were denied compensation they were promised.

    On January 2, the workers reportedly asked for a raise. They were told they could either keep their job with no pay raise or quit and get compensation. Obviously, many quit to get the compensation. The agreement was supposedly terminated and the workers never received their payments.

    The mayor of Wuhan was called to the scene to talk the group down. On January 3, the group decided not to jump which ended the whole affair.

    Suicides were a major problem in 2010 with Foxconn installing nets to prevent suicides at some of its facilities.

    This story brings Foxconn and overworked factory employees in China to the forefront again. In our mad dash to get the latest gadgets and have a steady supply of them, we forget to think about those in other parts of the world that make these devices. Hopefully, better employee treatment practices will soon be implemented so everybody can be happy.

  • iPhone 4S Launching In China January 13th

    iPhone 4S Launching In China January 13th

    Just a few weeks after the Chinese Ministry of Industry and Information Technology gave the iPhone 4S their approval early last month, the newest Apple handset is set to arrive in China late next week.

    Apple has announced that the 4S will be available in China on January 13th, just ten days before the Chinese New Year. Reports indicate that the smartphone with launch on China Unicom. Regional pricing has yet to be announced.

    “Customer response to our products in China has been off the charts,” said Tim Cook, Apple’s CEO. “With the launch in China next week, iPhone 4S will be available in over 90 countries making this our fastest iPhone rollout ever.”

    This huge round of rollouts includes over two dozen other countries, although none as significant as China. Much of the list is comprised of Central American and Caribbean Island nations.

    On January 13th, the iPhone 4S will be available in Anguilla, Antigua and Barbuda, Bolivia, Botswana, British Virgin Islands, Cameroon, Cayman Islands, Central African Republic, Dominica, Dominican Republic, Ecuador, Grenada, Guam, Guinea Conakry, Ivory Coast, Jamaica, Kenya, Madagascar, Mali, Mauritius, Niger, Senegal, St. Vincent and The Grenadines, Trinidad and Tobago, Turks and Caicos and Uganda.

    Previous package rollouts of the iPhone 4S took place in much of Europe back in October as well as places like South Korea, Hong Kong and New Zealand in November.

    With this next batch of launches, the 4S will be available in nearly 100 countries.

  • China’s Great Firewall Begets Alternate Facebook, Twitter

    What’s a global superpower without a little home-grown social media sprinkled in the mix? In the United States and Western Europe, services like Facebook and Twitter are as common in household nomenclature as toilet paper and driveways. As China continues to increase its influence on the global stage, it has seen a boom in social media use with odd alternate reality versions of services like Facebook and Twitter. Anyone reading this article is likely familiar with the following homepage:

    and so even though you probably can’t read the content on this next site you’ll at least recognize it for what it probably is:

    The second picture is from the website Renren, China’s equivalent to Facebook. It’s funny how even the user interface are somewhat literal mirrors of each other. Again, in another crude study, here is a site you probably have heard of:

    and then the Chinese counterpart, Weibo:

    It’s as if one of those comic book-style stories of a parallel world (limited to the social media world, in this case) splintered off of the one we know and grew alongside of ours in its own distinct yet familiar direction. So why might China have developed their own national equivalents of popular social media sites when Facebook and Twitter are available and already offer their sites in Chinese? In a word: censorship.

    China is notorious for micro-managing the content on social media sites so, instead of butted heads with the likes of Facebooks and Twitters, it makes sense to simply block those sites altogether and launch a indigenous version like Renren and Weibo. All of this is a part of the ominously sounding Golden Shield Project, or more commonly, The Great Firewall, that the Chinese government has implemented in order to control the flow of information among social media sites. The Diplomat describes a little about how it works:

    These services are then required to have automated or manual monitoring and censorship mechanisms in place to quickly identify and delete user-generated postings or disable accounts that run afoul of the Communist Party’s ever-changing censorship red lines. It’s a daily reality for Chinese bloggers, academics, activists, and even ordinary users to discover a posting deleted, their account locked, or their “friends” unable to view what they have just shared.

    But in the same way this microblogging service can enable commerce, entertainment and personal communication, it’s also increasingly used to share information and commentary unwelcome to the ruling Communist Party. To keep pace, Sina Weibo reportedly employs some 700 people to perform around the clock monitoring of millions of tweets.

    700 people just to monitor the tweets! People write such insipid things on Twitter that I my eyeballs would probably try to climb out of my skull if I had to read all of them in order to purge a some comments that didn’t flatter the government. China’s own citizens are often in the dark about major political events happening in their own country, such as “the muzzled Wukan revolt, the democratic ambitions of the Arab Spring protestors are absent” while “Liu Xiaobo’s 2010 Nobel Peace Prize is hidden from view, and the U.S. Embassy in Beijing’s efforts to discuss Hillary Clinton’s speech with Chinese microbloggers are deleted.”

    While there may be much to complain about in the western world, it is refreshing to be reminded that we can at least lambaste our political figures without having the digital duct tape slapped across our face. That would really diminish the good times enjoyed while following the #tweetthepress trends on Twitter whenever there is a political debate among presidential candidates.

  • iPad Sales in China Could Be Affected By Trademark Suit

    Did you know there was a tablet computer called the I-Pad nearly a decade ago? It was marketed by a Taiwanese company called Proview Technology, though it wasn’t quite as successful as the “iPad” you may be more familiar with.

    Proview reportedly registered trademarks for the IPAD name in the EU, China, Mexico, South Korea, Singapore, Indonesia, Thailand and Vietnam in the early 2000’s.

    A few months ago, Proview sought to sue Apple for trademark infringement in China and the U.S. The Financial Times had a conversation with Proview Chairman Yang Rongshan back then, who said that the company agreed to sell “global trademark” for the name to a US-registered company called IP Application Development, but didn’t realize that the company was linked to Apple. According to that conversation, Yang indicated the trademarks for China weren’t included, as they were filed by a different Proview affiliate out of Hong Kong (in 2000).

    Now, the Financial Times is reporting that a Chinese court has rejected Apple’s claim of ownership of the iPad trademark, which could present some problems with selling in China, where it has a handful of retail stores and about a thousand resellers.

    Now consider that when Apple reported its Q4 earnings in October, CEO Tim Cook emphasized that China continues to be the company’s fastest-growing market. In the country, sales were up nearly four times year-over-year, accounting for a sixth of Apple’s overall sales.

    “It’s an area of enormous opportunity…The sky’s the limit in there,” Cook was quoted as saying on the earnings call.

    It looks like the legal system might be at least partially limiting at the moment.

  • AdWords, Social Media in China & The World’s Population

    Today’s infographic round-up looks at which industries are using Google AdWords the most, the social media situation in China and the world’s population put into perspective.

    View more daily infographic round-ups here.

    Which Industries use AdWords:

    via

    Social media in China:

    Social Media in China

    A look at the world’s population:

    Seven Billion
    Created by: Masters Degree Online

  • China’s Up To Something In The Middle Of The Gobi Desert

    China’s Up To Something In The Middle Of The Gobi Desert

    In the middle of the Gobi desert, the Chinese are up to something. Or perhaps aliens are up to something. Or, I guess, some image-manipulating troublemakers are up to something.

    Either way, there are some incredibly mysterious structures in the area that have been captured by Google Earth. From concentric circles to grids to irregular metallic-looking patterns, the Chinese desert looks to be hiding some sort of secret on the border of the Gansu province, near Jiuquan.

    Let’s go ahead and get to the evidence. First, we have this pattern, that appears to consist of pathways with a metallic origin. According to Google Maps, it’s at least 5000 feet long and 2500 feet wide.

    Here are some thoughts from the internet, more specifically reddit, on the possible purpose of this irregular grid:

    • Street map of a U.S. city – possibly Washington D.C.
    • A grid for Chinese spy satellites
    • An alien QR code

    In a similar vein, here’s another irregular grid spotted in the Gobi desert. According to Google Maps, it’s a little under a square mile.

    Here’s we have a Stonehenge-like set of concentric circles. In the center, there appears to be three planes.

    Then we have these two structures, both resembling runways – but one is an almost glowing metallic blue color:

    Nearby, here are some metallic looking squares arranged in a grid, many of which appear to have been destroyed:

    What does this all mean? What could all of these structures signify? According to the Telegraph, it’s most likely part of China’s space program and/or military testing.

    The two reflective rectangles lie 70 miles from the nearest main road and there is no sign of any surrounding activity. However, Ding Xin military airbase, where China carries out its secret aircraft testing programme, is relatively nearby, at a distance of some 400 miles.

    400 miles in the other direction is Lop Nur, the salt lakes where China tested 45 nuclear bombs between 1967 and 1995.

    The planes with the concentric circles, and the destroyed grids sure seem to scream target practice. As far as the irregular grids are concerned, could they be “optical test ranges for missiles?” And could they resemble street grids? The fact that all of these mysterious structures are relatively close to each other suggest that it could be some sort of giant test site:

    There’s enough visual evidence here to satisfy conspiracy theorists and/or alien hunters for weeks. Is it the Chinese military? Is it visitors from outer space? Is it a clever artist who has overlain the patterns and trolled everyone? Discuss.

  • Chinese Gamers Sell Kids To Bankroll Their Habit

    It’s a tough world out there, and sometimes money can be tight. If you’re a young couple struggling to get by, where do you turn for a little extra cash?

    If you said “selling your children,” you are in a dark place my friend. But that’s exactly what Li Lin and Li Juan of Dongguan did. And they did it to fund their online gaming activity.

    ABC News reports out of China that according to Sanxiang City News, the young couple met back in 2007 in an internet cafe. They soon discovered that they both had a pretty strong love for online gaming.

    About a year after they met, Li Juan gave birth to a son. According to the reports, days after he was born the couple left him by himself while they traveled over 30 km away to play games at an internet cafe.

    It is unclear what particular online games captivated the couple. Possibly an MMORPG? Maybe social gaming? Whatever the games were, they required money, either for a subscription or for in-game micro transactions. Once the couple had their second child, they decided to sell the baby girl for the money to play their games. They received the equivalent of around $500 for her.

    When that went smoothly, they decided to sell their firstborn son as well. They raked in a substantially greater amount for him, somewhere around $4600.

    They then had another boy, and sold him for about $4600 as well.

    Who knows how many more children they would have made and then sold if they weren’t caught? Sure gives more meaning to the phrase “baby factory.”

    Li Lin’s mom turned them in when she found out what they were doing.

    According to ABC, when asked about their activities, the young Chinese couple replied, “We don’t want to raise them, we just want to sell them for some money.” They also said that they didn’t know they were doing anything illegal.

    Now, it wouldn’t be the first time that a story like this out of the East comes to us a little embellished. But it seems to fall in line with other stories we’ve heard recently about strange behavior when it comes to technology.

    Last month we told you about a Chinese high-school student that attempted to sell one of his kidneys on the black market in order to acquire the money to purchase an iPad2. A few weeks later, a Chinese girl attempted to sell her virginity through Weibo, China’s version of Twitter. What did she want for it? An iPhone 4.

    Those kids had it all wrong. You don’t sell parts of yourself to fuel your technology addiction, you sell your kids. I mean, you can only afford to part with a limited number of vital organs. Technically, you can make around 1.2 kids per year.

    Gaming addiction is real, folks. If this doesn’t make that abundantly clear, then I don’t know what does.

    [Image Courtesy Lungstruck Flickr Stream]

  • Get an iPad or Get Out of My Class Says Chinese Professor

    Remember your back-to-school lists? Whether you’re in grade school or college, it’s always smart to make an organized list of the things you need to succeed in the coming year. Pencils, Pens, Notebooks, Binders, Folders, newest-gen tablet device…

    Wait, what?

    One Chinese teacher has used social media to broadcast this message: Find a way to obtain an iPad or don’t bother taking his class.

    A professor at Shanghai Maritime University has created quite the controversy after he posted a message on his Weibo account directed at students in his finance course. Weibo, if you don’t know, is a micro-blogging service similar to Twitter.

    In this post he explains that all lessons, exams and other materials will require an iPad to access and that his students should find a way to acquire one over the summer otherwise they aren’t suited to study under his tutelage. Here’s the translated Weibo post, courtesy of MIC Gadget

    Started from the next semester, I will be using an iPad to teach the Financial lesson, all the lectures, exams, information will only given out in iPad compatibility mode. I hope every students would go and purchase an iPad, because iPad represents the most modern thinking, and my students must like that. If you don’t have money to buy one, then you go to earn money. If you cannot earn merely $4000 Yuan (around $615) within the holiday, then you are not suit in this course, and you are not necessary to be my student. Poverty or rich doesn’t reflect on your family background, but reflected on your ability.

    Well, this exercise is a pretty quick introduction into the field of business and finance…I guess.

    But the later Weibo posts paint the professor as a little bit of an Apple fanboy. Posting to the site in English, he said that the iPad is “not an innovation, it’s revolution.” He then argues that without the Apple tablet, “teaching process will be paralyzed.”

    As part of his posts about requiring iPads in his classroom, the professor also demanded that male students dress in suits and female students wear “simple make-up” in class. These small steps are ways to “further success” in financial learning.

    If this requirement is upheld, these Chinese college students will need to brainstorm. For those without jobs or parental support, how will they find the 4000 Yuan to purchase the tablet? Some of their fellow countrymen and women have already provided some options.

    First, they can turn to the black market. In June it was reported that a high-school freshman from China’s Huaishan, Anhui Province had sold one of his kidneys so that he could afford an iPad 2. That transaction was left incomplete when the teen’s mother found the surgery scar on her son, whose health was inexplicably declining before her eyes.

    For those weary of a sketchy operation, there is always the world’s oldest profession. Just weeks after the iPad 2/Kidney story, reports emerged that a young girl in China offered her virginity for an iPhone 4. She made the proposal via Weibo.

    Although many feel that tablets like the iPad could be harnessed for educational purposes, should a teacher be able to require a student to purchase one? Probably not. But when you think about the high cost of education, remember that college kids can easily drop $1,000 or more on textbooks for one single semester.

    Do you think the classroom of the future will be populated with tablets? Let us know in the comments.

    [Image Courtesy Wolfram Alpha App]