Kuwait Times

New Chinese law reinforces govt control of cyberspace

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BEIJING: China’s legislatur­e passed sweeping legislatio­n on Wednesday that reinforces government controls over cyberspace, as the nation’s leaders try to address what they see as growing threats to Chinese networks and national security.

The vaguely worded National Security Law is one of several new regulatory moves by China that worry privacy advocates and have foreign businesses concerned about potential harm to their operations inside the country.

The law calls for strengthen­ed management over the web and tougher measures against online attacks, theft of secrets, and the spread of illegal or harmful informatio­n. It said core informatio­n technology, critical infrastruc­ture and important systems and data must be “secure and controllab­le” in order to protect China’s sovereignt­y over its cyberspace.

The law offered no details on how China would achieve the goals, although a vast government Internet monitoring system has been in place for years.

China says it is a major target of hacking and other cyberattac­ks, and the ruling Communist Party has expended vast efforts in blocking online content it deems subversive or illegal.

China is also accused of running a state-sponsored effort to hack computers and steal government and commercial secrets overseas, while also spying on and harassing pro-democracy, Tibetan and human rights groups based abroad.

Most recently, Beijing was suspected as being behind a massive hack into a U.S. federal government computer server that resulted in the theft of personnel and security clearance records of 14 million employees and contractor­s. Chinese officials always deny engaging in such actions. The National Security Law, passed overwhelmi­ngly by the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress, replaces a law that focused more narrowly on counter-espionage.

In addition to cyberspace, the new legislatio­n covers a wide range of areas including the economy, social stability, territoria­l integrity, the military, culture, finance, technology, the environmen­t and food safety. Spokeswoma­n Zheng Shu’na said an overarchin­g legislatio­n was needed to deal with “ever-growing security challenges”.

“Externally speaking, the country must defend its sovereignt­y, as well as security and developmen­t interests, and ... it must also maintain political security and social stability,” Zheng was quoted as saying by the official Xinhua News Agency.

The new law is an extension of the hard line on security and repeated warnings against foreign ideologica­l subversion issued by the government of President Xi Jinping, who in 2013 establishe­d an overarchin­g National Security Commission to coordinate such efforts with him as chairman. A separate anti-terrorism proposal could require network operators and service providers fighting for a share of China’s $465 billion technology market to build in “backdoors” for government surveillan­ce, hand over encryption keys to Chinese authoritie­s and store user data within China. Companies worry that could undermine their ability to send encrypted emails or operate the kind of private corporate networks commonly used to secure communicat­ions.—AP

 ??  ?? BEIJING: A woman walks past advertisem­ent for a German cookware company in Beijing, China. China needs to better protect trade secrets and fairly enforce business rules to ensure European investment and hiring at a time when Chinese leaders are trying...
BEIJING: A woman walks past advertisem­ent for a German cookware company in Beijing, China. China needs to better protect trade secrets and fairly enforce business rules to ensure European investment and hiring at a time when Chinese leaders are trying...

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