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China Businesses The Internet

China Orders Companies To Step Up Monitoring of Foreigners In Anti-Spying Campaign (theguardian.com) 43

An anonymous reader quotes a report from The Guardian: Chinese social groups, enterprises and public entities will have increased responsibility to combat foreign espionage under new regulations issued by the country's ministry of state security. The regulations, which were released and took effect on Monday, come amid deepening hostilities between China and some western governments, including over the detention of foreigners accused of national security crimes. According to state media, state security will work with other government departments to "adjust" the list of groups susceptible to foreign espionage and to develop measures to safeguard against it, including Chinese Communist Party and state organs, social groups, enterprises and public institutions.

Once organizations are designated as having anti-espionage responsibility, state security will provide "guidance, supervision and inspection" of their efforts, including personnel vetting, and strict training, monitoring and debriefing for staff trips overseas. Identified organizations must report suspicions and incidents to authorities. It come amid increasing public campaigns to watch out for foreign spies, which state media has warned could be an "intimate lover" or "an online friend with the same interests."
According to Li Wei, an expert on national security and anti-terrorism at the China Institute of Contemporary International Relations, the new regulation "places emphasis on companies and institutions taking precautionary measures against foreign espionage." Li said key fields would include companies or institutions working in national defense, diplomacy, economy, finance and tech.
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China Orders Companies To Step Up Monitoring of Foreigners In Anti-Spying Campaign

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  • by Tablizer ( 95088 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @07:32PM (#61325934) Journal

    "How dare they snoop on us the way we've been snooping on them!"

  • Might be time for all the western nations to give greater scrutiny to the hordes of Chinese living and spying in the west. I firmly believe that the same rules they apply to westerners (and others) in China should be enforced on them in our western countries. No ownership of any company unless overseen by a Caucasian overlord. No fair trials. Short trials where they are found guilty as charged 98% of the time. Swift bullet to the head once convicted. Gulags for those convicted of lesser crimes. Chinese wom
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @08:14PM (#61326044)

      Lovely racist post to completely obliterate some actual facts.

      However, I wonder how China would like it if every Chinese venture on US soil had to be with a US partner owning 51% of the company, and all US companies had to have a DoD/CIA/DHS officer on the board who could override all decisions, and has access to all the company confidential stuff.

      • Re: (Score:1, Redundant)

        by trawg ( 308495 )

        I am not an expert, but I don't think foreign companies all require those measures anymore. I was looking into it at a totally superficial level while working in HK for a HK-based company with an office of developers in China that was trying to set up a separate subsidiary company.

        You can set up a 'wholly foreign owned enterprise'. It has pros and cons compared to the 'old system' - Wikipedia has a good summary:

        https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]

        I guess there's always the risk that they randomly decide to end

      • Re: (Score:1, Interesting)

        by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        The situation is not so different in the US. My employer is currently looking at setting up a US subsidiary because it's the only way to prevent the government competing with them. The feds are trying to develop similar technology to us, having used our systems and learned from our research work. Rules are that they can't compete with American companies, so we need to open an office there and transfer some technology to force them to shut down their programme.

        • Do you fear getting disappeared or your family arrested as leverage?

          • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

            by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

            I wouldn't travel to the US because I'm concerned about lack of basic rights at the border and when countering cops. I wouldn't carry any significant amount of cash in case the police stole it (civil forfeiture). While I think the risk to me of being the victim of rendition or simply being hauled off to some black site is low I wouldn't risk it.

            I also have serious doubts about the US justice system, not that the UK one is particularly good either.

            • by Anonymous Coward

              That's a bit overly paranoid. There are some problems, but even the stuff you see in the news is notable for being uncommon. I've been to (including working in) about 40 countries on 5 continents. While the US might the faultless in each category you mention, they are probably less problematic than 75 to 95% of other countries.

              Basic right as the border suck for every country. The most invasive, believe it of not, has been New Zealand. Guatemala might be next. The border officers in the US are just as

      • I like how it was downmodded and declared racist. That was the point of it, to describe what they do in reflected terms.

        Of course it is outrageous!

      • I think this 'Sammyson' is a foreign national posting a false-flag comment intended to make the West look racist and 'unfairly' biased against Chinese people to discredit the West. In fact I think the Chinese people are as much victims every day of the shitty Chinese government, but PRC shills, paid or unpaid, want to make out any criticism of the Chinese government for any reason to be a racism issue, so they can get all righteously indignated and play the victim.
        Meanwhile the Chinese government commits a
  • The CCP red scare! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by klipclop ( 6724090 ) on Wednesday April 28, 2021 @08:24PM (#61326062)
    It's a great cultural exchange. They come here and get freedom. We go there and we get arrested and tortured only to be used as a political pawn.
  • How much business does a company have to do in a foreign country to be considered a foreign agent of that country?

  • I don't see anything surprising in this. Life in China is like a panopticon, where your every action will be tracked automatically and the cameras will calculate your identity using facial recognition technology and a neural network to improve the image. Now such technologies are not very accessible to ordinary people like me and you, but something can be found on the Internet. For example I found in the Internet excellent cameras on the site https://ajax.systems/ [ajax.systems] . You may be interested to read more about

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