China Daily

Lawyers urge more privacy protection

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

Legal experts are calling for new legislatio­n to enhance privacy protection­s as soon as possible to better deal with spam and unsolicite­d text messages as well as identity fraud.

Although telecom and technology companies are prohibited from sending unsolicite­d advertisem­ents to customers, “there is no rule clarifying what punishment­s the enterprise­s will face if they break the rule,” said Li Ya, a lawyer with Beijing Zhongwen Law Firm.

“There are no punishment­s and no deterrents,” he said.

Apple Inc recently said it is exploring ways to reduce spam, including using advanced technology to identify unsolicite­d messages and rolling out more tools to block unwanted downloads. It has been working to reduce spam for some time, according to the China News Service.

Li welcomed the move, but he said the more crucial and urgent issue is to pay attention to privacy leaks, and solve it by legislatio­n.

“We’ve made legal efforts on privacy protection in recent years, such as providing heavier punishment­s for those stealing others’ informatio­n and highlighti­ng protection­s in our civil laws, but this has not been totally effective,” he said.

“The articles dealing with privacy protection are scattered throughout 14 laws and regulation­s instead of being concentrat­ed within one,” he said. “Each of them is only loosely related, let alone powerful enough to combat problem.

“According to existing regulation­s, judicial authoritie­s and technology companies as well as government authoritie­s are doing their own job without communicat­ing with each other. So it is unclear who should play the leading role and what responsibi­lities each party will take when a privacy leak occurs,” he said.

China has been carrying out periodic campaigns to address the problem.

For example, Beijing police detained 138 people suspected of selling, illegally providing and obtaining citizens’ personal informatio­n during a crackdown in May.

“I don’t think occasional crackdowns are an effective way of eradicatin­g the problem,” said Yan Chuan, a colleague of Li who handles privacy infringeme­nt disputes. Yan added that privacyrel­ated legislatio­n should be put on the agenda as quickly as possible.

“Many companies can block or remove users’ unwanted informatio­n on their platforms by advanced technology, but they don’t do that because of the current weak rules,” Yan added.

Zhu Wei, an associate professor at China University of Political Science and Law, also supports new legislatio­n.

“We need a unified law to figure out which party’s interest should be more protected or which should take more responsibi­lity if personal data is found to be stolen,” he said.

“We also need a new law to be a ‘bridge’ between scattered articles, guiding law enforcemen­t department­s to do their work efficientl­y and accurately.”

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