China’s cyber watchdog aims to allay internet companies’ worries


China’s cyberspace watchdog wants to build an “affectionate” relationship between internet enterprises and the government, a senior official said, the latest verbal assurance to an industry still on edge after a long and bruising regulatory crackdown.

Niu Yibing, vice minister of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), told a news conference the agency was supportive of the sector’s healthy development and wanted to create a “healthy, get-to-the-top, can-do entrepreneurial atmosphere”.

The CAC was among Chinese regulators who in late 2020 launched an unprecedented crackdown on the country’s technology giants. The campaign upended long-held industry practices, set new rules on how the companies should do business, and roiled markets, shaving billions of dollars in market value off the firms.

While regulators, facing a slowing economy, have not announced new rules this year at the pace they did last year, companies have remained cautious, with many, including the likes of giants like Alibaba Group and Tencent Holdings, cutting back on new investments and laying off thousands of workers.

Among some of the biggest issues that have worried investors are new rules that came into effect in February for Chinese firms with data on more than 1 million users to undergo a security review before listing their shares overseas.

Sun Weimin, head of the regulator’s cybersecurity coordination bureau, said the agency remained supportive of domestic firms seeking overseas listings, and that the review was to ensure that there was no data involved that could be abused by foreign governments.

There is also no final word on the saga of Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Global, which was the subject of a CAC-led probe that forced the ride-hailing leader to delist from New York within a year of its debut and made foreign investors wary about China’s tech sector.

While Didi was fined $1.2 billion last month for violating data security rules, it is not clear whether or when its apps will be allowed to return to app stores, or whether or when it can resume new user registrations.

Sun said that the CAC was supervising Didi’s rectification work, and that the regulator would continue to work to remove hidden security risks and punish any behaviour that endangered national security or data security.

A Beijing-based tech executive, whose company has previously been fined by regulators over data security issues, told Reuters that CAC’s statement on Didi showed how regulators were still not completely satisfied with the company.

“Didi is different from other Internet companies, the anti-monopoly work against other tech giants has either ended or stabilised, but clearly regulators are treating Didi differently,” the executive said, declining to be named as he is not authorised to speak to the media.

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China’s cyberspace watchdog wants to build an “affectionate” relationship between internet enterprises and the government, a senior official said, the latest verbal assurance to an industry still on edge after a long and bruising regulatory crackdown.

Niu Yibing, vice minister of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), told a news conference the agency was supportive of the sector’s healthy development and wanted to create a “healthy, get-to-the-top, can-do entrepreneurial atmosphere”.

The CAC was among Chinese regulators who in late 2020 launched an unprecedented crackdown on the country’s technology giants. The campaign upended long-held industry practices, set new rules on how the companies should do business, and roiled markets, shaving billions of dollars in market value off the firms.

While regulators, facing a slowing economy, have not announced new rules this year at the pace they did last year, companies have remained cautious, with many, including the likes of giants like Alibaba Group and Tencent Holdings, cutting back on new investments and laying off thousands of workers.

Among some of the biggest issues that have worried investors are new rules that came into effect in February for Chinese firms with data on more than 1 million users to undergo a security review before listing their shares overseas.

Sun Weimin, head of the regulator’s cybersecurity coordination bureau, said the agency remained supportive of domestic firms seeking overseas listings, and that the review was to ensure that there was no data involved that could be abused by foreign governments.

There is also no final word on the saga of Chinese ride-hailing giant Didi Global, which was the subject of a CAC-led probe that forced the ride-hailing leader to delist from New York within a year of its debut and made foreign investors wary about China’s tech sector.

While Didi was fined $1.2 billion last month for violating data security rules, it is not clear whether or when its apps will be allowed to return to app stores, or whether or when it can resume new user registrations.

Sun said that the CAC was supervising Didi’s rectification work, and that the regulator would continue to work to remove hidden security risks and punish any behaviour that endangered national security or data security.

A Beijing-based tech executive, whose company has previously been fined by regulators over data security issues, told Reuters that CAC’s statement on Didi showed how regulators were still not completely satisfied with the company.

“Didi is different from other Internet companies, the anti-monopoly work against other tech giants has either ended or stabilised, but clearly regulators are treating Didi differently,” the executive said, declining to be named as he is not authorised to speak to the media.

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