BEIJING (Reuters) – China’s Cyberspace Administration (CAC) said on Friday that officials from at least seven departments had sent a cybersecurity review to transit giant Didi Global Inc.
Regulators come with the CAC, the Department of Public Safety, the Department of State Security, the Department of Transportation, the Department of Natural Resources, the State Tax Administration and the State Market Regulation Administration, according to the release.
CAC provided additional main points in its statement, however, the involvement of several government agencies shows the most potent regulatory strain on the nine-year-old company.
China is in the process of reorganizing its privacy and knowledge security policy, and is drafting a law on non-public information coverage, which calls on generation platforms to impose stricter measures to ensure the safe garage of users’ knowledge.
In September, China is set to put into effect its knowledge security law, which requires companies that process “critical knowledge” to conduct threat testing and reporting. .
The COUNCIL presented the data-related cybersecurity investigation in Didi just two days after raising $4. 4 billion from its initial public provision in New York, raising the need for national security and the public interest. Regulators also ordered Didi to remove its apps in China. , which Didi says can damage her income.
Didi, which lately has a market capitalization of $60 billion, did not respond to a request for comment on the acc’s new statement. He previously said that it sells all the knowledge of Chinese users and roads in China.
(Report via Yingzhi Yang, Yilei Sun and Tony Munroe; edited via Stephen Coates)