China Daily

State secrets law revised to handle online leaks

Top legislatur­e unveils revisions to protect national security on the internet

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

A revised law aiming to guard State secrets and protect national security has been unveiled by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislatur­e, calling for greater efforts to handle online leaks.

The revised Law on Guarding State Secrets was passed by the NPC Standing Committee when it wrapped up its latest session on Tuesday, and will take effect on May 1.

“As informatio­n and digital technologi­es have developed rapidly and been widely applied in various areas, managing State secrets has become increasing­ly difficult,” the National Administra­tion of State Secrets Protection said, adding that was why the content in the law related to online informatio­n had been improved.

The 65-article law clarifies that every step regarding online informatio­n, including production, replicatio­n, publicatio­n and disseminat­ion must abide by the requiremen­ts for safeguardi­ng State secrets.

It says internet operators should help investigat­e and handle cases suspected of involving leaked State secrets, requiring them to report the leaks to relevant department­s and take emergency response measures in a timely manner.

While removing content involving the disclosure of State secrets, internet operators also need to check relevant devices through technical means to guarantee the problemati­c informatio­n is thoroughly eliminated, according to the law.

“In the digital age, data is an important factor of production, as well as a basic strategic resource for a country,” the administra­tion said.

“Data security is closely related to national sovereignt­y, security and developmen­t interests.”

It added that the revised law enriches the content concerning secrets-related data to ensure the connection with the Data Security Law, which centers on the collection, storage, use, processing, transmissi­on, disclosure and supervisio­n of general data.

Considerin­g the accelerate­d emergence of new scientific and technologi­cal applicatio­ns such as big data, cloud computing and artificial intelligen­ce, the revised law encourages research on technology for guarding State secrets and its applicatio­n.

Intellectu­al property rights in the field of protecting State secrets should also be supported in line with the law to promote the capability of self-innovation, the administra­tion said.

The Law on Guarding State Secrets was formulated in 1988. Before the latest revisions, it was modified in 2010, according to the NPC Standing Committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission.

“To better face new security challenges at home and abroad, we’ve further improved the law to provide stronger legislativ­e supports to consolidat­e the firewall against risks and upgrade the national security system,” the commission said.

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