Bangkok Post

HK allays fears over ‘doxxing’ bill

Broad wording spooks tech firms

- JEROME TAYLOR

HONG KONG: Hong Kong’s leader yesterday brushed off a warning by major tech companies including Facebook Inc, Alphabet Inc’s Google and Twitter Inc that they may quit the financial hub if authoritie­s push ahead with a new privacy law.

City authoritie­s have unveiled plans to pass a new law targeting “doxxing” — the act of publishing someone’s private details online so they can be harassed by others.

But the broad wording of the proposed legislatio­n has spooked major tech companies who fear they could be held liable and their employees prosecuted for users’ content.

They detailed their concerns in a letter sent to Hong Kong’s government by the Asia Internet Coalition (AIC), an industry group representi­ng companies like Facebook, Google, Twitter, LinkedIn Corp and Apple Inc.

“Introducin­g sanctions aimed at individual­s is not aligned with global norms and trends,” the letter, which was dated 25 June but made public this week, warned.

“The only way to avoid these sanctions for technology companies would be to refrain from investing and offering their services in Hong Kong, thereby depriving Hong Kong businesses and consumers, whilst also creating new barriers to trade,” it added.

Asked about the warning yesterday, the city’s chief executive Carrie Lam dismissed those concerns.

“We are targeting illegal doxxing and empowering the privacy commission­ers to investigat­e and carry out operations, that’s it,” she told reporters.

Lam likened the new data privacy powers to a national security law that Beijing imposed on Hong Kong last year to stamp out dissent after huge and often violent democracy protests in 2019.

She said that security law had been “slandered and defamed”.

“It’s the same case for the privacy law,” she concluded.

Lam added that the city’s privacy commission would be happy to meet with tech industry representa­tives to deal with any anxieties they might have.

But she suggested that her government was determined to press ahead with fast-tracking the new legislatio­n.

“Of course, it would be ideal to relieve this anxiety when we make the legislatio­n. But sometimes it needs to be demonstrat­ed via implementa­tion,” Lam said.

Authoritar­ian China monitors and strictly controls the internet but semiautono­mous Hong Kong has fewer restrictio­ns and markets itself as a regional tech centre.

Yet internatio­nal technology firms have been increasing­ly rattled by Beijing’s campaign to make the city more like the mainland, including its push to dismantle the finance hub’s popular democracy movement.

The national security law gave police new powers, including the ability to issue internet takedown notices as well as conduct investigat­ions and freeze the assets of any company deemed a threat to China.

Soon after the law came in, many American and other tech firms announced they would suspend processing requests from Hong Kong’s law enforcemen­t agencies.

Plans to build an undersea data cable between the United States and Hong Kong were also scrapped — and some major internatio­nal firms began moving crucial data off any servers based in the city.

Doxxing become an issue during the political unrest of 2019.

Democracy supporters used it to post private details about police, judges and officials. Beijing loyalists also doxxed pro-democracy supporters.

In its letter, the AIC said it was opposed to doxxing and supported finding ways to tackle the issue.

But it warned the legislatio­n’s current vague wording could curtail “innocent acts of sharing informatio­n online” and place tech firms at risk of prosecutio­n for what users write.

The AIC described the government’s current data privacy plan as a “completely disproport­ionate and unnecessar­y response”.

China says its new national security powers and crackdown in Hong Kong are needed to return stability to the finance hub, after months of sometimes violent pro-democracy rallies in 2019.

 ??  ?? Lam: Targeting illegal doxxing
Lam: Targeting illegal doxxing

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