“We saw the incitement to violence that was there,” Cook told Chris Wallace on “Fox News Sunday”.
“We do not believe that freedom of expression and incitement to violence have an intersection.”
But Cook contested that it is Apple’s role to host all services, regardless of their content. He noted that Apple has terms of service for its hosts’ 2 million apps, and apps that refuse to follow the rules are not allowed to access Apple’s general public.
“Obviously we don’t control what’s on the internet, but we’ve never seen that our platform should be a simple replication of what’s on the internet,” said Cook.
Apple will welcome Parler – as long as Parler finds a new cloud provider to host the social network – if the app effectively moderates users’ speech, said the CEO of Apple.
“We just suspended them,” noted Cook. “If they managed to moderate it, they would be back there.”
Still, Cook argued on Sunday that running a technology company is more than making a lot of money. He said on Sunday that he believes Apple’s mission must be to solve some of the world’s biggest problems. The company and its employees are always trying to do the right thing – a mission that motivates them to come to work every morning.
This helped to influence his decision about Parler – particularly after the siege of the Capitol.
“It was one of the saddest moments of my life – seeing an attack on our Capitol and an attack on our democracy,” said Cook. “I felt like I was in some kind of alternate reality, to be honest with you. This couldn’t be happening.”