The Pak Banker

China develops machines to track data sent abroad by cars

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China, the world's biggest vehicle market where regulators are implementi­ng new rules on data protection, is developing machines that will be able to track data sent abroad by cars, a government-backed agency said on Tuesday.

Cars are being fitted with an ever-increasing array of sensors and cameras to assist drivers. But the data such equipment generates can also be used by manufactur­ers to develop new technologi­es, such as autonomous driving systems, raising privacy and security concerns, particular­ly when the informatio­n is sent abroad.

Automakers in China are required to store data generated by vehicles locally and need to get regulatory approval when they need to export critical data abroad. U.S. electric carmaker Tesla Inc is under scrutiny in China over its storage and handling of customer data.

Beijing has been increasing­ly concerned over the mountains of data amassed by private firms and whether such informatio­n could be attacked or misused, especially by foreign states. It recently implemente­d a new data security law and is tightening up oversight in other related areas.

In May, Reuters reported that staff at some Chinese government offices were told not to park their Tesla cars inside government compounds due to security concerns over vehicle cameras, according to two people with knowledge of the matter.

China

Engineerin­g

Automotive

Research

Institute Co Ltd (CAERI) said in a statement it has developed a system to analyse the path of data transmissi­on by using a communicat­ion-detection device to monitor uploaded data and data gathered from vehicles in a testing environmen­t.

CAERI said the system is the first of its kind in China and was praised by government bodies. The institute also tested several vehicles, including Tesla's Model 3 sedan as well as sport-utility vehicles made by Audi, Daimler Mercedes-Benz and Land Rover, the statement said. It did not disclose the results.

Global automakers, including Tesla, Ford Motor and BMW, told Reuters in May they were setting up local data centers to comply with China's regulatory requiremen­t.

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