It would appear that Apple did in fact push an update that forced protestors to opt into receiving airdrop files, and it would only work for 10 minutes at a time. Not direct censorship, but the timing and increased difficulty was suspect to many. I don’t trust nostr:npub1mygerccwqpzyh9pvp6pv44rskv40zutkfs38t0hqhkvnwlhagp6s3psn5p's position on this. I find it unusually emotional and ego centered. Not sure what that’s all about.
Discussion
You personally attack me when I ask for evidence...
They did exactly this to phones purchased in the mainland China market, not Hong Kong.
And to be clear, the protestors were *not* using phones purchased in mainland China.
Regardless, your claim that Apple doing something funky with airdrop "suppressed protests in Hong Kong" is completely ridiculous because everything was organized using telegram/whatsapp/facebook/twitter, none of which were restricted.
I understand that your post is more about Apple than China's actions in Hong Kong, but it's still contributing to the process of manufacturing consent for war with China and I know you're smarter than that, that's why I'm annoyed with it.