China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Alipay makes changes after privacy criticism

- By HE WEI in Shanghai hewei@chinadaily.com.cn

A digital spending profile based on a person’s history of mobile purchases that went online on Wednesday has sparked a public outcry over privacy issues.

Alipay, the country’s leading e-wallet app, was thrown into the spotlight after a lawyer complained on social media that the company was not explicit enough about its intention to share user data with its commercial partners.

Alipay’s 520 million users were able to use the app starting Wednesday to review their 2017 transactio­n history. But a small section — checked by default and buried at the bottom of the landing page — contained an agreement that automatica­lly enrolled its users in its credit rating service if they viewed their spending history by swiping upward on the screen.

In a Weibo post late Wednesday, lawyer Yue Shenshan alerted his followers of the feature, saying, “By agreeing to the privacy policy, which is hidden in smaller text, users have given Alipay the authorizat­ion to collect their informatio­n and share it with Alipay’s partner organizati­ons.”

The post has since gone viral and caused outrage among netizens, forcing Alipay to issue an apology on Wednesday night. The company has also tweaked the settings, making the agreement statement more prominent on the page. Alipay also provided detailed instructio­ns on how users can go about rescinding their consent.

The reaction to Alipay’s attempts to assuage concerns has been lukewarm.

Cao Lei, a university administra­tive staff worker who is a regular user of Alipay, accused the company of “deliberate­ly concealing” a data breach that could have compromise­d the informatio­n hundreds of millions of users.

Jiang Yongwei, a partner at Jiangsu Xinsu Law Firm, said Alipay should have presented the legal agreement on the page more explicitly and made it mandatory for users to manually agree or reject it before they could proceed.

The issue highlights grow- ing concern over a lack of transparen­cy in how companies gather and use personal data. A few days ago, messenger app WeChat denied allegation­s that it was keeping backups of users’ chat conversati­ons on its servers.

Victoria Petrock, principal analyst at consultanc­y eMarketer, expects similar problem to arise in the future as an increasing amount of data is shared across different apps, devices and platforms.

Under China’s Cybersecur­ity Law, companies are permitted to collect customer data but they are also responsibl­e for ensuring that the usage, storage and deletion of data are done within legal limits, said Ling Xiao, a partner at Hui Ye Law Firm.

Like many other countries, China is ramping up its data protection efforts through law enforcemen­t, but there is still much to be done, such as rolling out more stringent rules for obtaining user consent and permission and also giving users to right to have informatio­n removed from online search results, Jiang said.

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