China Daily (Hong Kong)

Penalty tougher on informatio­nal leaks

- A JUDICIAL INTERPRETA­TION

jointly issued by the Supreme People’s Court and the Supreme People’s Procurator­ate on the management of people’s personal informatio­n comes into effect on Thursday. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

The document comes at a time when informatio­n sharks keep playing hide-and-seek with regulators. Although many have become cautious while offering their personal informatio­n including ID and cellphone numbers to strangers, there is no guarantee that they are immune to informatio­n leaks.

In some cases, it is “unlikely places” — banks, service stations, supermarke­ts — where people lower their guard and fall prey to informatio­n thieves. Not least because a sophistica­ted undergroun­d network of informatio­n exchanges has taken shape, and anyone may be involved.

In recent years, infringeme­nts on people’s personal informatio­n security have become a serious problem, increasing day by day.

Criminal cases infringing on the individual infor-

mation of citizens have become the source of many criminal acts. Most telecom frauds are based on illegally obtaining personal informatio­n.

What is more serious is that such crimes not only cause great financial losses but also unnecessar­y trouble and even unbearable distress for victims. In some telecom fraud cases last year the victims committed suicide after being swindled out of their hard-earned money.

The poor protection of people’s personal informatio­n and inefficien­t implementa­tion of the relevant laws are ultimately to blame for this. It is praisewort­hy that the interpreta­tion gets tougher on tackling personal data sharks, who face criminal accountabi­lity if their illicit gains exceed 5,000 yuan ($744). Now more institutio­nal efforts are called for to enforce the law.

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