Business groups appeal to China over cybersecurity law


August 11, 2016

A coalition of 46 business groups from the United States, Europe and Asia has appealed to China to change proposed cybersecurity rules they warn will harm trade and isolate the country.

The action adds to mounting complaints Beijing is trying to squeeze foreign competitors out of promising industries in violation of the communist government’s market-opening commitments.

In a letter to Premier Li Keqiang, the country’s top economic official, the groups warn proposed Chinese limits on information security technology might make data theft easier and violate World Trade Organization rules.

The letter represents the biggest such joint action since at least 2010, when business groups banded together to express concern over China’s controls on rare earths exports. Its signers include the Business Software Alliance, the U.S. Chamber of Commerce and bodies for insurers and manufacturers from Britain, Japan, Australia and Mexico.

“The current drafts, if implemented, would weaken security and separate China from the global digital economy,” said the letter, dated Wednesday.

A proposed Cybersecurity Law and separate rules for insurance companies would require technology providers to show authorities how their products work and to store information about Chinese citizens within the country.

The data storage rules “have no additional security benefits” and would “create barriers to entry” for providers, said the letter. It said being required to disclose how security products work might weaken data safety and count as trade barriers under WTO rules.

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