China Daily

A good start to protect personal informatio­n

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On opening any smartphone app these days one is instantly asked to authorize it to either collect one’s facial recognitio­n data or obtain access to the address book. Many users briefly hesitate, wondering whether giving access to the personal informatio­n this way is safe, but ultimately give in because unless one clicks “Yes, I agree” one cannot continue further.

In a document introduced on Monday, the Ministry of Industry and Informatio­n Technology, the Ministry of Public Security and some other department­s have listed clearly the necessary personal informatio­n that 39 categories of apps can collect. The document will come into effect on May 1.

For example, a car-hailing app can only obtain a user’s name, telephone number and location, because such informatio­n is necessary. The user’s photograph and gender are unnecessar­y details and hence the app should not collect them.

The move is a clear signal that apps should refrain from obtaining detailed personal informatio­n, let alone sell it for money.

In 2018, a China Consumers’ Associatio­n study of 100 apps found 90 of them obtaining unnecessar­y personal informatio­n of users. Many users have found their personal informatio­n “stolen” in this way. All that must stop. In 2019, four ministries jointly issued a document asking app developers to obtain users’ consent before collecting their personal informatio­n. The app makers found a way around it by making the consent part inconspicu­ous in a long list of terms and conditions that a user has to browse through before giving consent.

However, the latest document safeguards users’ personal informatio­n by defining what constitute­s “necessary personal informatio­n”. So, beginning May 1, if a weather report app collects users’ facial recognitio­n informatio­n, the users can report it to the authoritie­s.

Of course, it will be wrong to assume the document alone will end the practice. For instance, some apps introduce “multiple” functions to collect more informatio­n, which calls for stricter regulation. However, the document is a good beginning in that direction.

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