China intensifies data protection of companies
The state leadership in Beijing is tightening its data protection rules. Chinese driving service provider Didi has now become the subject of far-reaching data protection regulatory measures. Other companies could soon be affected as well.
For months now, Chinese regulators and ministries in China have been issuing a slew of new regulations that not only affect tech companies, but are also directed at how companies handle data in general.
A prime example of China’s “new” data protection policy can be seen in Didi’s public launch on the New York Stock Exchange. The Uber rival only went public for a few days and was urged by the Chinese authorities to remove its app from the app store before the end of the week. The reason for this is reported to have been serious data protection violations by the company, which are now being investigated. The company is said to have processed the collection and use of personal data by the company in a privacy-hostile manner.
Didi was ordered to comply with legal requirements and adhere to national standards. It should also ensure that the security of its users’ personal data is effectively protected.
The announcement had sent shares of the stock market newcomer crashing by more than 5% as of Friday. The news also caused tech stocks to fall on Asian exchanges.
Didi is the nearly undisputed leader among ride-hailing services in China, with 493 million active users and a presence in 14 countries.
Beijing’s new data protection
The actions of Chinese authorities or the Chinese leadership against tech companies speak for a rethinking of the Chinese leadership in terms of data protection.
Initially, there is much to suggest that the state leadership wants to get companies more under control. This is also to prevent third countries from obtaining data from Chinese companies and to prevent Chinese companies from installing themselves abroad.
According to reports, a document from the State Council in Beijing indicates that stricter controls are planned for Chinese companies that are traded on stock exchanges abroad. Capital raised by emerging Chinese companies on foreign stock markets, such as in New York or Hong Kong, will also be subject to more stringent requirements. Especially in the area of “data security, cross-border data flow and management of confidential information”, new standards are to be expected.
However, the aim seems also to better protect the data of Chinese citizens from unauthorized access by criminals or excessive data collection by tech groups and companies.
This is supported by the fact that the Chinese leadership has introduced several rules in recent years and months that are intended to improve data protection. Although the state is not to cede its own rights here, citizens are to be given more rights, at least with respect to companies.
The introduction of the European General Data Protection Regulation also forced Chinese technology companies to meet global data protection standards in order to expand abroad.
China’s data protection policy thus seems to be a contradiction in terms. It is a step towards more protection of the data subjects and at the same time another step towards more control.