What just happened? Microsoft has told all its employees in China that they will soon only be allowed to use iPhones for work purposes. The ban on Android devices is part of a security-related Microsoft initiative for providing a unified way of managing and verifying employee identities.

The mandate, set to come into effect in September 2024, was announced in an internal memo seen by Bloomberg News. It will require Microsoft's China-based workers to verify their identities when logging in to work computers or phones. The change is part of Microsoft's global Secure Future Initiative that is intended, among other things, to ensure that all staff use the Microsoft Authenticator password manager and Identity Pass app.

While Apple's iOS store is available in China, Google Play isn't. Local smartphone giants such as Huawei and Xiaomi operate their own platforms in the country, but Microsoft has chosen to block access from those companies' devices to its corporate resources because they lack Google's mobile services, reads the memo.

Any staff in the country using Android handsets, including those from Huawei or Xiaomi, will be provided with an iPhone 15, as a one-time purchase. The Redmond giant is designating collection points across China where employees can pick up their iPhones.

Microsoft is also introducing the iPhones-only rule in Hong Kong, despite the Google Play Store being available in the special administrative region of China.

Microsoft has been beefing up its cybersecurity recently following several embarrassing breaches. The company detected a nation-state attack against its corporate email network last year, identifying the likely culprit as Russian group Midnight Blizzard. The hackers had access to Microsoft's corporate network for a month, breaching some of the company's source code repositories and unspecified "internal systems."

In April, a government review of the attack on Microsoft's Exchange Online hosted email service by a China-linked group blasted the company for allowing a "cascade of security failures" that were preventable and should never have occurred. The report described Microsoft's security culture as "inadequate" and requiring an overhaul.

Apple and Microsoft have not commented on the report, but it's easy to imagine Apple welcoming the news, especially as China started banning iPhones from certain government offices last year, and sales of the devices in the Asian nation have slumped recently.