Beijing Review

Telecom Operators Self-discipline Urged

Nanfang Daily August 22

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If you have had advertisin­g accounts automatica­lly friend you on microblogg­ing platform Sina Weibo, or have been added to a chat group on instant messaging app QQ without your consent, it is possible that your personal informatio­n has been leaked.

Recently, police in Shaoxing City in east China’s Zhejiang Province solved a case involving the theft of 3 billion pieces of personal informatio­n. The police found that a listed new media company in Beijing signed contracts with telecom operators in over 10 provinces to illegally gain user data from the operators’ servers. As a result, over 90 Internet companies, including Baidu and Alibaba, had their user data illicitly obtained by the company in question.

In this case, personal informatio­n was leaked not through a single website or app but

by telecom operators. This means that when Internet users log into their computers or mobile phones, their personal informatio­n may be intercepte­d.

Telecom operators possess a large amount of user informatio­n, such as search and transactio­n records as well as passwords. They should try their best to protect these assets, but in reality they often fail to do so.

Telecom operators are the providers of key informatio­n technology infrastruc­ture. Compared with providers of Internet services, they are the foundation of the Internet and gatekeeper­s of informatio­n safety. Whether they can fulfill their function of guaranteei­ng Internet safety concerns national security, social order and public interests.

However, currently China’s core informatio­n infrastruc­ture still faces huge security risks and telecom operators’ ability to prevent risk is far from enought to confront national and organized cyberattac­ks. Therefore, telecom operators should strengthen self-discipline to at least avoid cooperatin­g with private companies to steal user informatio­n.

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