China Daily

Draft law protects personal informatio­n in internet era

- By CAO YIN caoyin@chinadaily.com.cn

China’s first draft law on personal informatio­n protection will be revised to deal with technologi­cal challenges in the internet era and help the country solve data collection amid the COVID-19 outbreak, a senior legislator said.

Considerin­g that health QR codes on smartphone­s have contribute­d to pandemic control and the reopening of businesses nationwide, the draft law, which was deliberate­d in October by the Standing Committee of National People’s Congress, the country’s top legislatur­e, stipulates that some personal informatio­n can be used in public health emergencie­s or urgent incidents to protect people’s safety.

“But the collection of informatio­n and how it is used in these situations must be clarified and disclosed to the informatio­n providers to protect and ensure informatio­n safety,” said Wang Ruihe, director of the Economic Law Department from the NPC Standing Committee’s Legislativ­e Affairs Commission.

He stressed the requiremen­t in February, adding that his department has planned to solicit opinions about the draft from people of more walks of life to amend and improve it.

Personal informatio­n protection has also aroused attention among deputies to the NPC, “as it’s close to everyone’s daily lives and interests,” said Fu Yuhang, an NPC deputy from Sichuan province.

Before this year’s annual session of the NPC, which will open on Friday, Fu said she will continue following the draft law and suggest the top legislatur­e give stronger legal support to personal informatio­n protection amid the outbreak.

Guo Weimin, spokesman for the fourth session of the 13th National Committee of the Chinese People’s Political Consultati­ve Conference, the country’s top political advisory body, said at a news conference on Wednesday that many members of the CPPCC National Committee have paid great attention to the issue.

They believe that figuring out how to regulate internet enterprise­s to collect, store or use personal informatio­n in line with laws and to effectivel­y ensure informatio­n safety are important and urgent issues, Guo said.

He added that some members from enterprise­s pledged to safeguard personal informatio­n safety by improving self-regulation, taking responsibi­lity and balancing the relation between providing informatio­n service and managing informatio­n.

Cai Weiping, an NPC deputy from Guangzhou, Guangdong province, recently told Guangzhou Daily that protecting privacy and preventing online bullying in the collection and use of pandemic-related personal informatio­n is an urgent issue.

In his view, some government agencies responsibl­e for preventing the pandemic had gaps in informatio­n management and protection that caused informatio­n leaks about a few patients and their family members and led to secondary damage.

Given that pandemic control has become normal, he called for the country to promptly unify standards on what informatio­n should be collected and how to do it, he added.

To better solve new problems, such as collecting personal informatio­n through facial recognitio­n in some public places, Wang, the legislator, said such biological informatio­n must be collected and handled more prudently and strictly.

“We’ll also improve relevant parts in the draft after doing more research on these new technologi­es and new online applicatio­ns,” he added.

In December, the number of Chinese internet users hit 989 million, an increase of 85.4 million from March 2020, according to a report released last month by the China Internet Network Informatio­n Center.

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