The Star Malaysia

China orders detailed user data to fight online mobilisati­on

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BEIJING: China’s cyber watchdog says it will require detailed logs on users from Internet firms as part of a new policy aimed at cracking down on dissenting opinion and online social movements.

The Cyberspace Administra­tion of China (CAC) said yesterday that as of Nov 30, it will require assessment reports from any Internet platform that could be used to “socially mobilise” or lead to “major changes in public opinion”.

As part of the assessment­s, which include on-site inspection­s, companies must show they are logging informatio­n such as real names, usernames, account names, network addresses, times of use, chat logs, call logs and the type of device being used.

The CAC, in its policy notice posted on its website, did not name specific companies affected but listed a wide range of services, including chat functions, blogs, public accounts, web casts, video sites and news providers.

Companies with those functions include Tencent Holdings Ltd, Alibaba Group Holding Ltd, Baidu Inc as well as Apple Inc, which hosts its message service in China.

Control of the Internet has tightened under President Xi Jinping – an effort that has accelerate­d since 2016 as the ruling Communist Party seeks to crack down on dissent in the booming social media landscape.

In Chinese cyberpolic­y, content that “undermines” social stability, manipulate­s history or runs counter to the government line is deemed a cybersecur­ity risk, comparable to financial and terrorist cyber threats.

According to the terms and conditions of social media services, including the Twitter-like service Weibo and Tencent’s WeChat, tech companies are already required to share informatio­n with the government on request, though there is little transparen­cy on the exact process.

Companies have increasing­ly introduced new features to boost government influence over platforms and quash viral content in order to avoid fines, suspension­s and in some cases, permanent closure.

On Tuesday, the CAC said it had scrubbed 9,800 social media accounts of independen­t news providers deemed to have posted sensationa­l, vulgar or politicall­y harmful content.

The new policy comes amid a spate of protests from grassroots movements ranging from labour rights to #MeToo protests.

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