Kuwait Times

App stores in China must register with the state

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App stores in China must register with the state from Monday, a government statement said, as China tightens its control over the internet. App stores are “not strict” when they examine and approve apps, the China Cyberspace Administra­tion, the country’s internet watchdog, said in a statement.

Lax standards have led to the “frequent appearance of apps that spread illegal informatio­n, encroach on users’ rights and contain security hazards,” it added in the statement issued last week. China’s ruling Communist party oversees a vast censorship apparatus designed to censor online content deemed politicall­y sensitive, while blocking some Western websites and the services of internet giants including Facebook, Twitter and Google.

It passed a controvers­ial cybersecur­ity bill in November, tightening restrictio­ns on online freedom of speech and imposing new rules on online service providers. The clampdown on app stores came just after Apple removed the New York Times from its China app store, stating that it was in violation of local regulation­s.

In the absence of Google Play, which is blocked, China is home to a variety of different Android app stores, though the landscape is mostly dominated by internet giants Baidu, Tencent, and Alibaba.

The first two companies control nearly half the Android app stores run in the country as of the third quarter of last year, according to a report from consulting firm Analysys.

Internet legal expert You Yunting of DeBund Law Offices told AFP the move “definitely has a political agenda”, but as Baidu, Alibaba and Tencent were already managed by the internet watchdog, the impact “won’t be too big”.

Meanwhile, Baidu Inc., which operates China’s most popular Internet search engine, said yesterday it has hired a former Microsoft executive and artificial intelligen­ce specialist to improve its competitiv­eness in the field.

The Beijing-based company said Qi Lu was named group president and chief operating officer in charge of products, technology and sales. Qi, who has a Ph.D. from Carnegie Mellon University, previously was Microsoft Corp.’s global executive vice president. —Agencies

 ??  ?? AHMEDABAD: Indian student Harshwardh­an Zala (C) meets with Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) officers to show them a drone he has designed at the Rapid Action Force (RAF) Camp on the outskirts of Ahmedabad on Sunday. Zala began working on a prototype...
AHMEDABAD: Indian student Harshwardh­an Zala (C) meets with Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) officers to show them a drone he has designed at the Rapid Action Force (RAF) Camp on the outskirts of Ahmedabad on Sunday. Zala began working on a prototype...

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