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(Reuters) — China announced an initiative on Tuesday to establish global standards on data security, saying it wanted to promote multilateralism in the area at a time when “individual countries” were “bullying” others and “hunting” companies.
The announcement, by State Councillor Wang Yi, comes a month after the United States said it was purging “untrusted” Chinese apps under a program dubbed “Clean Network.”
China’s initiative calls for technology firms to prevent the creation of so-called backdoors in their products and services that could allow data to be obtained illegally, as well as for participants to respect the sovereignty, jurisdiction, and data management rights of other countries.
It also calls for participants to not engage in large-scale surveillance of other countries or illegally acquire information from foreign citizens through information technology.
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Wang did not detail the nature of the initiative or say whether any other country had joined.
“Global data security rules that reflect the wishes of all countries and respect the interests of all parties should be reached on the basis of universal participation by all parties,” Wang said.
“Some individual countries are aggressively pursuing unilateralism, throwing dirty water on other countries under the pretext of ‘cleanliness,’ and conducting global hunts on leading companies of other countries under the pretext of security. This is naked bullying and should be opposed and rejected.”
China tightly controls and censors its own cyberspace through the popularly dubbed Great Firewall, which has for years restricted access to firms such as U.S. giants Twitter, Facebook, and Google owner Alphabet.
The administration of U.S. President Donald Trump has taken aim at Chinese giants such as Huawei, Tencent Holdings, and TikTok owner ByteDance, citing concerns over national security and the collection of personal data, which the companies have rejected.
The Trump administration has blocked U.S. exports to Huawei and plans to ban TikTok in the United States this month unless ByteDance sells TikTok’s U.S. operations.
(Reporting by Gabriel Crossley and Ryan Woo in Beijing, Brenda Goh in Shanghai. Editing by Muralikumar Anantharaman and Christopher Cushing.)
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