China Daily (Hong Kong)

Campaign to protect data online gathers steam

- By ZHANG YAN zhangyan1@chinadaily.com.cn

Police will investigat­e hackers or other cybercrimi­nals to protect national and private informatio­n, according to the Ministry of Public Security. The special campaign, initiated by the ministry in September, will run until the end of this year, according to the ministry.

“Cybercrime­s have a huge impact on some enterprise­s and the public’s vital interests and we will resolutely fight them,” according to a statement from the ministry.

In recent years, a growing number of online crimes infringing on private informatio­n have occurred nationwide, resulting in a high incidence of other crimes, such as telecom fraud, online fraud, blackmail or extortion.

Data released by the ministry show that, in 2016, police arrested 4,261 suspects for accessing personal informatio­n in 1,886 cases.

From January to June, authoritie­s closed 73 illegal livestream­ing platforms and imposed lifetime bans on 1,879 such outfits who violated regulation­s.

Commenting on the statistics, Shi Yanan, a law professor at Renmin University of China, said: “In China, the number of cybercrime­s is on the rise, up 30 percent annually due to the lack of supervisio­n and comprehens­ive management. The aim of combating cybercrime­s is to protect people’s informatio­n and reduce other crimes.”

According to the ministry, suspects illegally obtain informatio­n ranging from ID informatio­n, phone numbers, home addresses, network account numbers, bank account details, passwords and shopping records. And gang members take on different tasks including that of informatio­n suppliers, telecom agents or traders. The suspects also traffic personal informatio­n and use fake ID informatio­n to engage in telecom or online fraud.

In a recent campaign led by the National Office Against Pornograph­ic and Illegal Publicatio­ns, a team arrested 50 suspects and took down 118 websites and 913 online billboards involved pornograph­y or the trading of personal informatio­n.

According to the ministry, police officers will improve investigat­ion abilities to deter such crimes. Besides, they will clean up the online environmen­t, while working with other department­s, including websites and online service providers to reduce cybercrime.

 ?? WANG HONGQIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY ?? A visitor looks at a display about cyber fraud at an event on cybersecur­ity in Chengdu, Sichuan province, on Sept 18.
WANG HONGQIANG / FOR CHINA DAILY A visitor looks at a display about cyber fraud at an event on cybersecur­ity in Chengdu, Sichuan province, on Sept 18.

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