New Chinese law to impose more personal information protection duties on internet giants


BEIJING -- A new draft law submitted to China's top legislature for review has proposed imposing more requirements related to personal information protection on the country's big internet platforms.
The draft law on personal information protection on Monday returned to the Standing Committee of the National People's Congress (NPC) for a second reading.
According to the draft, big internet platforms that possess the personal information of a large number of users must set up an independent body mainly composed of outsiders to supervise how the information is handled.
The internet giants are also required to publish social responsibility reports on personal information protection on a regular basis.
Lawmakers will deliberate the draft in group discussions during the ongoing session of the NPC Standing Committee, which runs from Monday to Thursday.
- CPC members work against the clock to restore normal life in rain-hit Hunan
- Ceremony commemorates legendary ancestor of the Chinese civilization Fuxi
- Former KMT chair leads Taiwan delegation to honor Fuxi, Chinese culture
- Shanghai conference discusses occupational mental health in China
- Qingdao Summit strengthens global ties through multinational cooperation
- Chinese vice-premier calls for championing humanity's common values, promoting multipolar world