New Chinese Tort Liability Law Contains Provisions Affecting Personal Data

On December 26, 2009, the Standing Committee of China’s National People’s Congress passed a landmark new law that contains provisions affecting personal data. The new law will go into effect on July 1, 2010.

The P.R.C. Tort Liability Law is a wide-ranging law that imposes tort liability for matters ranging from environmental damage to product liability to animal bites. Certain of its provisions relate, expressly or in a general sense, to personal information. These provisions can cause data users to incur liability to data subjects for the mishandling of personal information.

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Provincial Consumer Protection Regulations in China May Affect Personal Data

Although China has yet to enact a national data protection law, certain provincial-level rules implementing national consumer protection laws impact the collection and use of personal data.  These provincial regulations may warrant specific attention by entities doing business in the relevant Chinese provinces.  The impact of each of these will often be limited, both because they affect only enterprises doing business in the respective provinces and because the actual requirements of each of these regulations are typically modest.  Also, the potential penalties for violation are manageable in most cases. In addition, these provincial regulations could be superseded by national-level data protection legislation, depending on its terms.  Read more...

Privacy and the Protection of Personal Information in China

Privacy laws in China are still evolving, and at this time there is no coordinated legal framework addressing data protection.  There are, however, a number of Chinese laws that are applicable to the processing and protection of personal information.  Navigating the indirect, piecemeal Chinese approach to regulation in this area may prove challenging for foreign counsel accustomed to practicing in jurisdictions with explicit privacy protection legislation and data security laws.  To shed some light on these issues, we have prepared an overview of various Chinese laws that bear on privacy and information security.  Click here for the full article.
 
The article was originally published on the DataGuidance website at www.dataguidance.com.

China's Amendment to Criminal Law Includes Data Protection Provisions

The Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress recently passed an amendment to the P.R.C. Criminal Law.  The amendment includes a provision imposing criminal liability on persons who misappropriate personal information during the course of performing their professional duties.  A previous Hunton & Williams Client Alert reported on the amendment that has now become effective as law.  Click here for a detailed summary of the relevant requirements.

The amendment as passed imposes potential criminal penalties not only on government agency personnel, but also on personnel in financial, telecommunications, transportation, educational and medical institutions who may sell personal information or provide it to others.  In other words, the law appears to allow the imposition of penalties within the private sector, as well as on government officials who misappropriate personal data.  The law can also make an enterprise, or a supervising person within an enterprise (“management personnel with direct responsibility”), liable for such misappropriations that are conducted by the enterprise.

Possible penalties for such misappropriations include imprisonment for less than three years, imposition of a fine (as a single penalty or concurrently with other penalties), or detention.  The amendment also makes intrusions into computer systems outside the government sector and obtaining information stored, processed, or transmitted thereon a criminal act.

Companies in the financial, telecommunications, transportation, educational and medical sectors in China may want to establish internal procedures to prevent misappropriations of personal data within their enterprise, and to undertake employee educational efforts to foster awareness of the importance of handling personal data with appropriate care.

China to Consider Measure to Increase Protection of Personal Information

A law that could increase the level of protection of personal information is circulating among legislative bodies in China. The proposed PRC Tort Liability Law would include clauses providing protections for personal information, by giving a person whose rights are infringed by the use of Internet services a right to demand deletion of the infringing materials. Another clause imposes liability on an Internet service provider that fails to take timely measures after receiving such a demand. Read more...