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China Communications Wireless Networking Technology

Hong Kong's Protesters Use AirDrop To Spread Information To Mainland Chinese Visitors (qz.com) 85

An anonymous reader quotes a report from Quartz: Hong Kong's protesters are using AirDrop, a file-sharing feature that allows Apple devices to send photos and videos over Bluetooth and Wi-Fi, to breach China's Great Firewall in order to spread information to mainland Chinese visitors in the city. Leaving AirDrop settings open allows anyone in the vicinity to send files to your device. A protest held yesterday (July 7) in Tsim Sha Tsui, one of Hong Kong's most popular tourist districts, had a clear aim: to tell people from mainland China about the city's opposition to a hated extradition bill, which has mobilized millions of people over the past several weeks to multiple protests and presented the most critical challenge to the local government in decades.

But news of the protest has been heavily censored in mainland China, with any mention of the mass movement wiped off the Chinese internet. Even songs alluding to the city have been scrubbed. As such, many Chinese tourists were visibly confused by the large march, which organizers say drew an estimated 230,000 people. Hong Kong's protesters have therefore turned to Apple's AirDrop feature to get their message across to their mainland Chinese compatriots. That the messages are written in simplified Chinese -- Hong Kongers use traditional Chinese -- confirm that the intended audience is Chinese tourists.

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Hong Kong's Protesters Use AirDrop To Spread Information To Mainland Chinese Visitors

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  • Apple (Score:5, Insightful)

    by 110010001000 ( 697113 ) on Wednesday July 10, 2019 @09:28AM (#58900992) Homepage Journal

    Hopefully Apple will issue a patch that will close this loophole and also notify the Chinese government of this behavior. After all, China is a big market for Apple products. It is their duty to the shareholders!

    • While I agree that Apple will quickly cave on this if asked to protect their Chinese income, I'm quite sure the ChiComs are already at work on repressive measures that don't require Apple's cooperation. If it came down to it, I could easily see Beijing ordering Hong Kong's cell service shut down as an emergency measure.

      • by Anonymous Coward

        AirDrop, a file-sharing feature that allows Apple devices to send photos and videos over Bluetooth and Wi-Fi

        Literally, the first sentence in TFA!

        • by G00F ( 241765 )

          In that case, china flooding the 2.4ghz spectrum (or what ever Wi-Fi and bluetooth uses there)

          It's not like those devices are hard to make.

  • Not as efficient (Score:2, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward

    Actually iPhone users in China usually turn off AirDrop from people not in their contacts, because AirDrop spams are rampant in China. Some people just airdrop ads from real estates and ballet classes to Falun Gong to random iPhone users discovered nearby. IPhone will display the image to the receiver even though the receiver may just refuse the airdrop.

    • Some people just airdrop ads from real estates and ballet classes to Falun Gong to random iPhone users

      I am pretty dubious about that because even though a user would see an image (a small image), you'd still have to be somewhat close to send, and if the person was wandering around they'd never see anything... I'm going to Shanghai and Hong Kong next year, I'll leave Airdrop open and see what I get.

    • by dj245 ( 732906 )

      Actually iPhone users in China usually turn off AirDrop from people not in their contacts, because AirDrop spams are rampant in China. Some people just airdrop ads from real estates and ballet classes to Falun Gong to random iPhone users discovered nearby. IPhone will display the image to the receiver even though the receiver may just refuse the airdrop.

      Leave it to the Chinese to ruin a good thing. I only airdrop memes to strangers.

  • Honeypots (Score:4, Interesting)

    by aaarrrgggh ( 9205 ) on Wednesday July 10, 2019 @09:44AM (#58901048)

    Too bad it is still easy enough to catch people via honeypots in the crowd. Full anonymity would be an issue for Apple.

  • So how does sending dick pics help the Hong Kong movement?
  • ... you're being monitored. You're being tracked. And potentially, you're being censored.

    Paper is an effective medium for spreading messages anonymously.
    • Paper is an effective medium for spreading messages anonymously.

      Not unless you have a (expensive) printing press and distribution network And if you have those things it's typically pretty easy to monitor who is doing the printing and distribution. Not saying paper can't be effective but it's not trivial to keep it anonymous at large scale.

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