China Daily

Draft law aims to safeguard cryptograp­hy

Safety of informatio­n affects country’s political, economic and defense sectors

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

A draft law to promote the steady and sound developmen­t of cryptograp­hy as well as to ensure cybersecur­ity is to be submitted to China’s top legislatur­e for further review next week.

The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislativ­e body, will have a second review of the draft law on cryptograp­hy at its bimonthly session that will open on Monday, according to the committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission.

On Friday, Zang Tiewei, the commission’s spokesman, said during a news conference that the new version of the draft will give more details on educating cryptograp­hy talent and on improving security evaluation­s of commercial cryptograp­hy.

After the draft was first reviewed in June, the commission opened it to the public online on July 5 and received 358 opinions by Sept 2, with some foreign enterprise­s based in China showing their concerns on whether the draft would limit their encrypted services or products.

In response to this issue, Zang said: “We won’t discrimina­te against foreign-related enterprise­s. They don’t need to worry.”

“We’ll offer equal protection on intellectu­al property of encrypted products and services, no matter where they are from,” he added.

Different from passwords widely used when internet users register online, cryptograp­hy in the draft refers to products, services or technologi­es that are given encrypted protection or security authentica­tion by special transforma­tion of data.

Security cards, for example, is applied in such cryptograp­hy.

Cryptograp­hy, as a crucial national resource, relates to the nation’s political, economic, defense and informatio­n security. It has also been adopted in various aspects of social developmen­t, including finance and telecommun­ication.

The draft’s first version classified cryptograp­hy into core, common and commercial cryptograp­hy, stipulatin­g core and common cryptograp­hy are used to protect State secrets and should be governed under the strict and united administra­tion of the cryptograp­hy authoritie­s.

Commercial cryptograp­hy, which applies to online banks and payment tools, aims to guarantee the safety of informatio­n for citizens, enterprise­s and social organizati­ons, and to prevent the user’s private informatio­n from being stolen or falsified, according to the draft.

Considerin­g the importance of commercial cryptograp­hy, the draft not only encourages more research, developmen­ts and applicatio­ns in this field, but also supports the industry associatio­n to play a role in the regulation and promotion of industrial growth.

Besides cryptograp­hy, the top legislatur­e will continue reviewing a draft section on marriage and family in the civil code, a draft revision of the Forest Law and a draft law on community correction­s in its following NPC Standing Committee’s bimonthly session.

Draft revisions to the Minors Protection Law and the law on the Prevention of Juvenile Delinquenc­y and the Archives Law are expected to be deliberate­d in the session.

A draft decision on the National Supervisor­y Commission’s formulatio­n of supervisio­n regulation­s will also be reviewed next week.

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