San Francisco Chronicle

Facebook halts Hong Kong user data requests

- By Zen Soo Zen Soo is an Associated Press writer.

Social media services and messaging apps including Facebook, WhatsApp, Telegram, Google and Twitter will deny law enforcemen­t requests for user data in Hong Kong as they assess the effect of a new national security law enacted last week.

Facebook and its messaging app WhatsApp said in separate statements Monday that they would freeze the review of government requests for user data in Hong Kong, “pending further assessment of the National Security Law, including formal human rights due diligence and consultati­ons with internatio­nal human rights experts.”

The policy changes follow the rollout last week of laws that prohibit what Beijing views as secessioni­st, subversive or terrorist activities, as well as foreign interventi­on in the city’s internal affairs. The legislatio­n criminaliz­es some prodemocra­cy slogans like the widely used “Liberate Hong Kong, revolution of our time,” which the Hong Kong government has deemed has separatist connotatio­ns.

The fear is that the new law erodes the freedoms of the semiautono­mous city, which operates under a “one country, two systems” framework after Britain handed it over to China in 1997. That framework gives Hong Kong and its people freedoms not found in mainland China, such as unrestrict­ed internet access.

Spokesman Mike Ravdonikas said Monday that Telegram understand­s “the importance of protecting the right to privacy of our Hong Kong users.” Telegram has been used broadly to spread prodemocra­cy messages and informatio­n about the protests in Hong Kong.

“Telegram has never shared any data with the Hong Kong authoritie­s in the past and does not intend to process any data requests related to its Hong Kong users until an internatio­nal consensus is reached in relation to the ongoing political changes in the city,” he said.

Twitter also paused all data and informatio­n requests from Hong

Kong authoritie­s after the law went into effect last week, the company said. It is reviewing the national security law to assess its implicatio­ns.

“Like many public interest organisati­ons, civil society leaders and entities, and industry peers, we have grave concerns regarding both the developing process and the full intention of this law,” the company said in a statement.

Twitter emphasized that it was “committed to protecting the people using our service and their freedom of expression.”

Likewise, Google said in a statement that it too had “paused production on any new data requests from Hong Kong authoritie­s” and will continue reviewing details of the new law.

Social services such as Facebook, Instagram, Twitter, and WhatsApp have operated freely in Hong Kong, while they are blocked in the mainland under China’s “Great Firewall.”

Though social services have yet to be blocked in Hong Kong, users have begun scrubbing their accounts and deleting prodemocra­cy posts out of fear of retributio­n. That retreat has extended to the streets of Hong Kong as well.

Many of the shops and stores that publicly stood in solidarity with protesters have removed the prodemocra­cy sticky notes and artwork that adorned their walls.

Hong Kong’s government late Monday issued implementa­tion rules of Article 43 of the national security law, which give the city’s police force sweeping powers in enforcing the legislatio­n and come into effect Tuesday.

Under the rules, services and publishers, as well as internet service providers, may be ordered to take down electronic messages published that are “likely to constitute an offence endangerin­g national security or is likely to cause the occurrence of an offence endangerin­g national security.”

Service providers who do not comply with such requests could face fines of up to $12,903 and receive jail terms of six months.

 ?? Lam Yik Fei / New York Times ?? Supporters of a detained protester hold blank signs outside a courthouse in Hong Kong Friday. Facebook has temporaril­y stopped processing Hong Kong government requests for user data.
Lam Yik Fei / New York Times Supporters of a detained protester hold blank signs outside a courthouse in Hong Kong Friday. Facebook has temporaril­y stopped processing Hong Kong government requests for user data.

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