China Daily Global Edition (USA)

Inhabitant­s of the virtual world need protection by rule of law

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RECENTLY GOOGLE AND FACEBOOKwe­re reported to be the victims of a $100-million phishing scam conducted by a Lithuanian man, who has now been charged by the US Department of Justice. Beijing Youth Daily comments:

The case shows we still lack effective global internet governance.

Since there are no governance regulation­s that suit all countries and regions, it is time each country drafted one of its own. Actually, the fraudster in theGoogle and Facebook case cheated in away that is quite common in China: He pretended to be a customer of the two companies and sent emails asking for money. In China that happens every day and the authoritie­s have done very well in educating people not to fall into such traps.

The Chinese authoritie­s are also doing well in combating online fraud and regulating the internet. According to 110.360.cn, an official platform for reporting internet scams, they received 20,623 such reports in 2016, with the total money involved reaching 195 million yuan ($28.3 million). Some experts have even estimated that the losses to internet fraud may exceed 100 billion yuan a year.

China has been constantly fighting the fraudsters who hide in the vast expanse of the internet. The country has already establishe­d a nationwide big data antifraud platform, and it is building a long-term regulation mechanism for the internet. But improved legislatio­n is needed to protect personal informatio­n in order to effectivel­y fight fraudsters.

The internet must be under the rule of lawand only proper regulation can protect people’s legal rights and allow the virtual economy to prosper. The case of Google and Facebook shows that creativity alone is not enough, what is needed is stricter regulation.

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