\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>
By Martin Quin Pollard and Eduardo Baptista<\/strong>

BEIJING: China's cyberspace watchdog wants to build an \"affectionate\" relationship between internet enterprises<\/a> 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<\/a>), told a news conference on Friday 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<\/a> which 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
Alibaba Group<\/a> and Tencent Holdings<\/a> cutting back on new investments and laying off thousands of workers.

Among some of the biggest issues that have worried investors include 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<\/a>, 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<\/a>, 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<\/a>, 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 media.


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中国的互联网公司的网络监管机构试图平息外界的担忧

妞妞兵的,中国的网络管理部副部长(CAC),告诉在周五的新闻发布会上,该机构是支持该行业的健康发展,想要创建一个“健康,到达山顶,乐观进取的创业氛围”。乐动扑克

  • 2022年8月19日更新是下午说

马丁·五胞胎波拉德和爱德华多•巴普蒂斯塔


北京:中国的网络监管机构想要建立一个“深情”之间的关系互联网企业政府一位高级官员说,最新的口头保证行业仍在边缘经过长时间的监管打击和瘀伤。

妞妞兵,中国(网络管理部副部长CAC),告诉在周五的新闻乐动扑克发布会上,该机构是支持该行业的健康发展,想要创建一个“健康,到达山顶,乐观进取的创业氛围”。

CAC -是中国监管机构在2020年底发起了一项前所未有的打击该国的科技巨头。竞选颠覆了长期以来的行业惯例,公司应该如何做生意,新规则,扰乱了市场,剃须数十亿美元的市场价值的公司。

广告
虽然监管机构,面临着经济放缓,今年没有宣布新的规则在去年的步伐,公司仍保持谨慎,许多包括巨人的喜欢阿里巴巴集团腾讯控股减少新投资和裁掉数以千计的工人。

一些最大的问题之一,一直担心投资者包括2月生效的新规则对中国公司超过100万用户的数据进行安全审查之前,海外上市。

太阳音译,监管机构的负责人网络安全协调机构表示,该机构一直支持国内企业寻求海外上市,而且涉及审核是确保没有数据可以被外国政府。

也没有最终中国ride-hailing巨头的传奇迪迪全球是CAC-led调查的主题,迫使ride-hailing领袖摘牌从纽约在一年内的首次亮相,让外国投资者担心中国的科技行业。

虽然迪迪上个月被罚款12亿美元因违反数据安全规则,目前尚不清楚或者当它的应用程序将被允许回到应用程序商店,或是否能恢复新用户注册。

太阳说,CAC是迪迪的整改工作,监督,监管机构将继续删除隐藏的安全风险和惩罚任何危害国家安全的行为或数据安全。

广告
北京科技高管,他的公司曾被监管机构罚款数据安全问题,对路透表示,迪迪CAC的声明表明监管机构仍不完全满意。

“迪迪是不同于其他互联网公司对其他科技巨头,反垄断工作结束或企稳,但显然监管机构把迪迪不同,”这位高管说,他不愿透露姓名不授权媒体说话。


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\"\"
<\/span><\/figcaption><\/figure>
By Martin Quin Pollard and Eduardo Baptista<\/strong>

BEIJING: China's cyberspace watchdog wants to build an \"affectionate\" relationship between internet enterprises<\/a> 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<\/a>), told a news conference on Friday 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<\/a> which 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
Alibaba Group<\/a> and Tencent Holdings<\/a> cutting back on new investments and laying off thousands of workers.

Among some of the biggest issues that have worried investors include 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<\/a>, 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<\/a>, 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<\/a>, 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 media.


<\/body>","next_sibling":[{"msid":93655013,"title":"Rajasthan govt on way to provide smartphones to 1.35 crore women","entity_type":"ARTICLE","link":"\/news\/rajasthan-govt-on-way-to-provide-smartphones-to-1-35-crore-women\/93655013","category_name":null,"category_name_seo":"telecomnews"}],"related_content":[],"msid":93655297,"entity_type":"ARTICLE","title":"China's cyber watchdog tries to assuage concerns of internet firms","synopsis":"Niu Yibing, vice minister of the Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC), told a news conference on Friday the agency was supportive of the sector's healthy development and wanted to create a \"healthy, get-to-the-top, can-do entrepreneurial atmosphere\".","titleseo":"telecomnews\/chinas-cyber-watchdog-tries-to-assuage-concerns-of-internet-firms","status":"ACTIVE","authors":[],"Alttitle":{"minfo":""},"artag":"Reuters","artdate":"2022-08-19 12:27:16","lastupd":"2022-08-19 12:34:36","breadcrumbTags":["China cyber watchdog","internet","internet enterprises","cac","Chinese regulators","Alibaba Group","Tencent Holdings","cybersecurity coordination bureau","Didi Global","Internet companies"],"secinfo":{"seolocation":"telecomnews\/chinas-cyber-watchdog-tries-to-assuage-concerns-of-internet-firms"}}" data-news_link="//www.iser-br.com/news/chinas-cyber-watchdog-tries-to-assuage-concerns-of-internet-firms/93655297">