Warning: fopen(/tmp/jnewslibrary-uh6sna.tmp): failed to open stream: Disk quota exceeded in /home/syyfiiaq/satoripulse.com/wp-admin/includes/class-wp-filesystem-ftpext.php on line 139

Warning: unlink(/tmp/jnewslibrary-uh6sna.tmp): No such file or directory in /home/syyfiiaq/satoripulse.com/wp-admin/includes/class-wp-filesystem-ftpext.php on line 142
Thursday, February 2, 2023
SATORI PULSE
  • Home
  • Computers
  • Laptop
  • Apple
  • Camera
  • Industry Tech
  • More
    • Gaming
    • Smartphone
    • Applications
    • VPN
    • Wearable
  • Products
SHOP
SATORI PULSE
No Result
View All Result

China’s Tech Crackdown Could Make US Regulation More Likely

admin by admin
May 12, 2022
Home Industry Tech
Share on FacebookShare on Twitter


In the latest sign that the unfettered growth enjoyed by China’s tech giants is coming to an end, Beijing has unveiled a raft of new regulations that reasserts the ruling Chinese Communist Party’s authority over every aspect of its citizens’ digital lives.

Among the new regulations: a law that reduces the amount of time that children and teens are allowed to spend playing video games to just three hours per week, and a directive banning online celebrity fan clubs.

The new rules are part of a broader crackdown by Beijing against domestic tech tech titans like Tencent and Alibaba. “The story of Chinese tech companies over the last 15 years is, they grew quickly and became innovative because they existed in this space that the state did not regulate and did not fundamentally understand,” says Adam Segal, the director of the digital and cyberspace policy program at the Council on Foreign Relations. “Now it has clearly laid down the marker and said: That era is over.”

Read more: How China Is Cracking Down on Its Once-Untouchable Tech Titans

Some of the new rules, like regulating social media algorithms and bringing in new privacy laws, bear similarities to proposals from progressive critics of Big Tech in the U.S.—at least on the surface.

The regulations are part of a global trend of states wresting power out of the arms of tech companies. China’s intervention, as the second-largest economy in the world, could set a new template for how authoritarian states deal with tech giants.

The new Chinese rules could also potentially make it harder for companies like Facebook and Google to fend off efforts by authorities in the U.S. and Europe to regulate them more heavily. “One of the arguments that we shouldn’t be going after Big Tech so strongly in the U.S. was that China has analog firms for every one of these companies, and they would be able to roll over U.S. companies because the government was supporting them,” says Scott Wallsten, president of the Technology Policy Institute, a D.C.-based think tank. “Well, overnight, that argument just went up in smoke.”

“China’s recent moves support the idea that the choice is not between regulation and no regulation,” says Segal. “The new question is: Who’s going to do the smartest regulation?”

Here’s a look at what the new Chinese tech regulations mean for China—and the attempts to rein in Big Tech around the world.

Limits on gaming and celebrity culture

Chinese regulators announced on Monday that they would reduce the number of hours that children under 18 would be allowed to play online video games to three hours per week—only Fridays and weekends, plus an extra hour on public holidays. The rules previously allowed children a maximum of 90 minutes gaming time per day, and double on holidays.

On Friday, the government also released a list of new rules banning online celebrity fan clubs. The rules say celebrities must not “induce fans to consume” and must prevent minors from engaging in online gatherings.

The crackdown on celebrity fan culture comes after authorities have criticized its “chaotic” presence, online—with reported incidents of fan groups doxxing and bullying members of other celebrity fan clubs, as well as flooding comments sections with coordinated spam.

The Chinese Communist Party said the regulations are meant to protect children and adolescents. “Teenagers are the future of our motherland,” the state news agency Xinhua quoted an unnamed official as saying. “Protecting the physical and mental health of minors is related to the people’s vital interests, and relates to the cultivation of the younger generation in the era of national rejuvenation.”

But according to some tech watchers outside China, the moves tie into anxieties within the Chinese government that the rapid growth of the technology sector has led to urban young people becoming distanced from the party and its ideology. “It’s part of a larger effort to rein in what the party sees as the excesses of Chinese internet culture and its negative impacts on society,” says Segal. “The party sees [gaming and celebrity culture] as a waste of time, and extreme addiction-like behavior. They want to see what they would consider as more moderate, more cultured, more productive behavior.”

Chinese celebrities are also increasingly seen as a risk by the CCP, just like gaming and large tech companies, says Xiaomeng Lu, the director of the Eurasia Group consultancy’s geo-technology practice. “If you are a delivery guy making below minimum wage and working 14 hours per day with barely any protections from your employer, and you are looking at celebrities making millions of dollars per day, what would you think?” she says. Lu believes such a visible imbalance risks fueling anti-government sentiment, and that the CCP saw it as a threat.

Reining in algorithms

The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) released a draft copy of rules on Friday that would place limits on the artificial intelligence algorithms used by tech companies to rank content in social media feeds.

When they come into effect, these rules would be the first in any major country to force tech companies to change how they recommend and rank content, Segal says.

The E.U. has proposed a law that would force companies like Facebook and YouTube to be transparent about how their algorithms work, and allow lawmakers to demand they be changed. But it still faces years of legislative hurdles, which could include efforts to water it down, before it comes into force.

Read more: How the E.U’s Sweeping New Regulations Against Big Tech Could Have an Impact Beyond Europe

Both the Chinese and E.U. rules seek to return power from tech companies into the hands of the government. But while the E.U. regulations seek to safeguard individual rights, the Chinese rules are aimed at curbing the proliferation of what the CCP sees as pernicious “Western values.”

The draft Chinese rules say algorithm providers should ensure their products “adhere to the mainstream value orientation,” and prohibit users from “disseminat[ing] information prohibited by laws and administrative regulations”—for example content that endangers national security or disrupts “economic and social order.”

In the U.S. and Europe, much of the discussion around algorithmic transparency centers around the role of the platforms amplifying misinformation and disinformation and other online harms. In China, “it’s more to do with what they see as the extremes of Internet culture—live streams of people eating, and excesses like that,” Segal says. “They’re worried about national security, too.”

The rules could have huge ramifications for companies like ByteDance, the owner of TikTok and its Chinese equivalent Douyin, according to Lu. “The Chinese government had already developed a very sophisticated regime to target content in web pages or videos,” she says. “This is confirmation that the existing content regime will be extended to content promoted by artificial intelligence.”

TikTok has become the most-downloaded app in the world, driven by the strength of its content suggestion algorithm.

Data privacy rules

China also passed a new data protection law on Friday that offers citizens increased privacy protections while also creating new barriers for companies.

The Personal Information Protection Law (PIPL) is similar in scope to the European Union’s General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), but with broad carve-outs for “national security” requiring companies that process Chinese people’s data to keep that data inside China, and preventing companies from transferring citizen’s sensitive personal data abroad.

“If you’re doing business in China, get legal advice. They’re not playing around,” Omar Tene, the vice president of the International Association of Privacy Professionals, wrote on Twitter.

The law does not restrict the Chinese government accessing data on its own citizens, however.

PIPL may increase pressure on the U.S. to pass its own federal privacy law. “With PIPL, three of the world’s top four economies will have omnibus data privacy laws—EU, China and Japan,” Tene wrote on Twitter. “The U.S. still doesn’t.”

More Must-Read Stories From TIME


Write to Billy Perrigo at billy.perrigo@time.com.



Tags: ChinascrackdownregulationTech
admin

admin

Next Post
At a CAGR of 14.26% Global LED lighting Market Size | 2022 – 2028

Demand for Global Aquaponics Market Size & Share Worth USD 1807.29 Million by 2028, Exhibit a CAGR of 12.9% Growth

Leave a Reply Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Recommended.

Data Improves Smallholder Farmer Credit Access

Data Improves Smallholder Farmer Credit Access

March 31, 2022
Dealpath CEO Mike Sroka Recognized as a Top Influencer in CRE Technology by GlobeSt.com | News

HKSTP Takes Talent Mission to New Level with T2 – Hong Kong’s First-Ever Innovation Tech x Talent Month | News

March 1, 2022

Trending.

David Arkless appointed as Chairman of The Board at Joblio – Technology Today

David Arkless appointed as Chairman of The Board at Joblio – Technology Today

June 28, 2022
Bigger Fleets Win | Proceedings

Bigger Fleets Win | Proceedings

January 1, 2023
Budget 2023 Industry Pins Hopes On Increased Govt Funding And Support For Online Initiatives

Budget 2023 Industry Pins Hopes On Increased Govt Funding And Support For Online Initiatives

December 23, 2022
Lekki Free Zone set to partner with Gluwa on blockchain technology

Lekki Free Zone set to partner with Gluwa on blockchain technology

September 22, 2022
Top Business and Technology Trends in 2021

Top Business and Technology Trends in 2021

November 26, 2021

Recent News

Xi Jinping stresses accelerating the establishment of a new development pattern when presiding over a political bureau group study session-Xinhua

February 2, 2023
How the US Tech War on China Is Changing the World

How the US Tech War on China Is Changing the World

February 2, 2023
SXSW GAMING AWARDS TO BE HOSTED BY NEWCOMERS JANA MORRISON & SAMANTHA AUCOIN , STARS OF SYFY’S NEW, CRITICALLY-ACCLAIMED SERIES “ASTRID & LILLY SAVE THE WORLD” ON MARCH 12, 7 P.M. CT

WAYFINDER GAMES BRINGS INDUSTRY VETERANS TOGETHER TO FORM NEW, FULLY-REMOTE VIDEO GAME STUDIO BASED IN SWEDEN

February 2, 2023

Categories

  • Apple
  • Applications
  • Camera
  • Computers
  • Gaming
  • Industry Tech
  • Laptop
  • Smartphone
  • VPN
  • Wearable

Tags

Analysis Announces big Billion Business CAGR China Cloud Companies Company data development Digital Forecast Future gaming Global Growth Industry Innovation Key launches live Market million modern News online Partners platform Reach Report Research security Size smart Software Tech technologies technology Top Trends USD watch World
  • Privacy And Policy

© 2021 satoripulse

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Computers
  • Laptop
  • Apple
  • Camera
  • Industry Tech
  • More
    • Gaming
    • Smartphone
    • Applications
    • VPN
    • Wearable
  • Products

© 2021 satoripulse


Warning: fopen(/tmp/jnewsfirstload-ht8wcy.tmp): failed to open stream: Disk quota exceeded in /home/syyfiiaq/satoripulse.com/wp-admin/includes/class-wp-filesystem-ftpext.php on line 139

Warning: unlink(/tmp/jnewsfirstload-ht8wcy.tmp): No such file or directory in /home/syyfiiaq/satoripulse.com/wp-admin/includes/class-wp-filesystem-ftpext.php on line 142