China Daily (Hong Kong)

Suit claims Baidu apps illegally tap data

- By ZHOU WENTING in Shanghai zhouwentin­g@chinadaily.com.cn

Chinese internet giant Baidu is facing public interest litigation in Jiangsu province after refusing to make changes in two smartphone applicatio­ns suspected of being able to illegally monitor users’ phone calls and obtaining their contact lists.

The Nanjing Intermedia­te People’s Court placed the case on file on Tuesday, the Jiangsu Provincial Consumers Council told a media briefing on Friday.

The council said that in July it had talked to 27 companies that operate popular mobile phone applicatio­ns in the areas of audio and video, book reading, mobile payment and travel, and that it had found issues infringing on consumers’ personal informatio­n.

“So far most of the companies have submitted their rectificat­ion plans to us with substantiv­e measures — including deleting unnecessar­y authority to obtain the users’ informatio­n, providing a reminder to users, adding a page for users to choose to give the permission or not — which respects consumers’ rights to know and choose, and better safeguards consumers’ personal privacy,” the council said.

However, Baidu refused to make changes to its two apps — Mobile Baidu and Baidu Browser — which the council said had functions that could monitor users’ phone calls, read text and multimedia mes- sages, and obtain their contact lists.

“Before users install such apps, the apps do not state that they include such functions, which obviously exceed the reasonable range for apps providing internet search service,” the council said.

“Moreover, the apps do not clarify to users the way and the intention for getting such informatio­n, and the company shifted the responsibi­lity to the smartphone operating systems,” it said.

Operators who collect and use consumers’ personal informatio­n are legally required to clarify to users why the informatio­n is collected and how it will be used and only use it with users’ permission.

Beijing-based Baidu had not responded by press time.

The provincial consumers council said it began the investigat­ion last year after finding that the practice of infringing on users’ personal informatio­n — which has led to many cases in recent years, causing huge financial losses — were prevalent in the app industry.

Ju Shang, deputy secretaryg­eneral of the council, said the lawsuit is an effort to protect the legal rights and interests of consumers including but not confined to those in the province.

“We aim not only to halt the illegal infringeme­nt actions of Baidu but also promote the healthy developmen­t of the app industry and foster a safe and reassuring internet environmen­t,” she said.

Some internet users said they often feel disgusted with apps that can acquire certain informatio­n by default if the users’ do not decline permission, and said it is the right time to regulate the app market.

“They include knowing where I am through GPS, my mobile phone model and configurat­ion, and having the right to send me text messages for commercial­s,” said an internet user going by the penname of Karl.

The apps do not clarify to users the way and the intention for getting such informatio­n.”

Cang Wei and Fan Feifei contribute­d to this story.

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