China Punishes 100 apps for Breaches of Personal Information!

China has cracked down on another large batch of apps in order to strengthen the protection of personal data amid rising consumer anxiety in the country over the potential for online privacy breaches.


The China Cybersecurity Center said 100 apps, across a range of industries including e-commerce and banking, have been penalised since November, for incorrect collection of personal data, lack of privacy agreements or ambiguous rules, according to a statement on its WeChat official account.


It added that 27 of the apps received rectification orders and 63 received written warnings. Meanwhile, 10 were issued with fines while another two were under criminal investigation. "In total, 683 apps have been punished this year," said the report. "China's public security authorities will continue to crack down on violations of personal information."


The blacklisted apps include offerings from e-commerce services providers Weidian and Kaola, online housing rental platform Fang.com as well as vehicle information provider Chexun.com, although the specific punishments for each app were not disclosed.


Privacy infringements and information breaches have become hot-button issues in China, as the country continues to digitise its economy. Last month, China's authorities requested that internet companies strengthen protection of personal data amid concerns that some have been stealing, trading or revealing personal information in the name of conducting big data research.


China's national internet finance association stated that "without consumer consent, member organisations should not collect, use or provide personal consumer information to third parties".


China is currently working on new data privacy laws, in an effort to address sensitive issues that have also tasked governments elsewhere as more aspects of everyday life become a digital experience. During the "two sessions" in April, National People's Congress spokesman Zhang Yesui said authorities had hastened the drafting of a law to protect personal data, but did not say when it would be completed or enacted.




Source: SCMP

Editor: Crystal H


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