So what? Smartphones are routinely restricted in, or excluded from, sensitive locations
News of Beijing's ban was, which mentioned people familiar with the matter as having said employees at some central government regulators were told not to use iPhones for work or bring them into the office.describes the fresh orders as representing an extension of previous restrictions on iPhone use, but also reported it's unclear how widely the recent round of restrictions has been implemented.
The paper put the bans in the context of geopolitical tensions, China's desire for technological independence, and hinted the ban is perhaps therefore Beijing's latest move in the game of 4D diplomatic chess. ThePerhaps Beijing, fresh from, has shown it can take a bite out of Apple at the time of its choosing.
Or perhaps this is just Beijing taking sensible steps to improve infosec at government agencies and tired of Apple not doing enough to help.Another plausible rationale would see Beijing tightening security because mobile devices are dangerous. Smartphones are routinely excluded from sensitive spots within government and have been for years. In 2018, for example, the Pentagon
[PDF] requiring smartphones to be turned off and placed in secure storage rather than carried into the building.only devices it has approved to be used with data rated as"secret" or"top secret."
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