China Daily (Hong Kong)

Law in works to put personal data under better virtual lock and key

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THE MINISTRY OF PUBLIC SECURITY has recently published a draft regulation on internet security supervisio­n for public opinions. The draft stipulates that the internet service providers face a penalty of up to 1 million yuan ($159,000) if they are found to have engaged in the illegal transactio­n of personal informatio­n, even if their action does not result in any crime or yield a cent in illegal gains. Legal Daily comments:

The leaking of personal informatio­n is a chronic disease of the informatio­n age. Even leading global players are not immune to it, with Facebook in the spotlight recently over users’ data being harvested for political purposes without their knowledge.

It has become a convention­al practice for app or software providers to require users give them consent to access their personal informatio­n before allowing them to use their products.

In fact, at least five laws in China, including the Constituti­on and the Criminal Law, have special clauses on the protection of citizens’ privacy, and the judicial authoritie­s have also published legal explanatio­ns on internet privacy infringeme­nt cases.

Although the draft regulation is only a department

rule, it is easier to be implemente­d, and its suggested penalties, harsher than those set out in the Criminal Law, directly target the internet service providers. This hits the nail on the head, and gives it greater effectiven­ess in checking the increasing­ly pervasive personal data mining and trade in personal informatio­n that has evolved into an almost quasi-open business online.

Hopefully, after a finalized regulation takes effect, the public security department­s can act more promptly and be more responsive to internet users’ appeal and complaints about their personal informatio­n being misused. This will immediatel­y make the internet companies behave better and take the initiative in fulfilling their legally bound duties to be the primary guardians of their customers’ personal informatio­n.

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