Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Facebook Google Twitter

Facebook, Twitter, Google Threaten To Quit Hong Kong Over Proposed Data Laws (wsj.com) 92

Facebook, Twitter, and Alphabet's Google have privately warned the Hong Kong government that they could stop offering their services in the city if authorities proceed with planned changes to data-protection laws that could make them liable for the malicious sharing of individuals' information online. From a report: A letter sent by an industry group that includes the internet firms said companies are concerned that the planned rules to address doxing could put their staff at risk of criminal investigations or prosecutions related to what the firms' users post online. Doxing refers to the practice of putting people's personal information online so they can be harassed by others. Hong Kong's Constitutional and Mainland Affairs Bureau in May proposed amendments to the city's data-protection laws that it said were needed to combat doxing, a practice that was prevalent during 2019 protests in the city. The proposals call for punishments of up to 1 million Hong Kong dollars, the equivalent of about $128,800, and up to five years' imprisonment. "The only way to avoid these sanctions for technology companies would be to refrain from investing and offering the services in Hong Kong," said the previously unreported June 25 letter [PDF] from the Singapore-based Asia Internet Coalition, which was reviewed by The Wall Street Journal.
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Facebook, Twitter, Google Threaten To Quit Hong Kong Over Proposed Data Laws

Comments Filter:
  • Stop (Score:5, Insightful)

    by SniffTheGlove ( 1261240 ) on Monday July 05, 2021 @01:17PM (#61553218)

    >Facebook, Twitter, and Alphabet's Google have privately warned the Hong Kong government that they could stop offering

    I think China would love that very much!

    • by Sebby ( 238625 )

      >Facebook, Twitter, and Alphabet's Google have privately warned the Hong Kong government that they could stop offering

      I think China would love that very much!

      Probably the original intended end result of that law.

      • And it works in the west as well. All carefully curated and free of false news.

      • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

        interesting that isn't it. Right one law, that only sorts of targets them, most people wont care and boom down they go. A subtle law, that targets their business model and makes them legally liable for the harm and damage it does. Boom, their gone, overnight. They can protest as much as they want but everyone uses them but hates them and everyone knows, get rid of them and some other company will turn up and do a better job. Happens every time.

        Politicians planetwide have just learned how to bitch slap the

    • by Aubz ( 7986666 )
      Don't let the door hit you on the way out boys.
    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      >Facebook, Twitter, and Alphabet's Google have privately warned the Hong Kong government that they could stop offering

      I think China would love that very much!

      Exactly! They are very welcomed to leave. I have to wonder which idiot thought of this idea of punching one’s own face and say “are you afraid of me now?”

  • Awesome threat!

    "You better stop targeting us, or we'll pull up stakes and leave just like you want us to."

  • by gurps_npc ( 621217 ) on Monday July 05, 2021 @01:29PM (#61553246) Homepage

    Look, they are not planning on blocking Hong Kong/Chinese people from using their services.

    What they are threatening to do is to pull all their people out of Hong Kong and continue to offer service, all while ignoring Hong Kong Law.

    Oh, they will put up a web page saying "We do not offer service to Hong Kong", but they will not take any steps to prevent people in Hong Kong from using their services.

    • by lsllll ( 830002 )

      Oh, they will put up a web page saying "We do not offer service to Hong Kong"

      Why should they? They shouldn't even put that up. Just pull out of HK and call it a day.

    • but they will not take any steps to prevent people in Hong Kong from using their services. and then china will force them to give up logs.

      • by sjames ( 1099 )

        china will force them to give up logs.

        Or what?

        • firewall block? jail / prison time?

          • by sjames ( 1099 )

            No prison if they have all pulled out. Firewall doesn't matter if they have given up on the region.

            • by dryeo ( 100693 )

              Until China gets big enough to be able to force its client states to arrest and extradite people China considers criminals. Just consider what America will do to bring someone to their justice.

    • by pavon ( 30274 )

      They may even make a good faith effort to follow the law (doxing is already a violation of Twitter's TOS, not sure about others).

      What I'm curious about is which countries would extradite people to Hong Kong for violation of this law. Will this end up having a larger spill-over where they have to pull out of more locations than just Hong Kong? Generally countries will only extradite for offenses that are also illegal in their own country, but I don't have encyclopedic knowledge of all the particulars, nor w

      • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

        What I'm curious about is which countries would extradite people to Hong Kong for violation of this law. Will this end up having a larger spill-over where they have to pull out of more locations than just Hong Kong? Generally countries will only extradite for offenses that are also illegal in their own country, but I don't have encyclopedic knowledge of all the particulars, nor whether some countries, like China, would use extradition over this for political purposes.

        Generally speaking, through history, Hon

        • by dryeo ( 100693 )

          Extradition does occasionally happen without a treaty. It's rare but if a country wants to get rid of an axe murderer, it is an option. A famous case was Afghanistan's offer to extradite Bin Laden to America if America would show some proof.
          As for extraditing to China, they're assembling client states so there are countries that would happily extradite just like Canada extradited Marc Emery when America pressured for it. That was about selling seeds that was worth a small fine in Canada or a long prison ter

    • by khchung ( 462899 )

      Look, they are not planning on blocking Hong Kong/Chinese people from using their services.

      Hahahaha! Did you think FB, etc, would want the traffic from people they cannot sell ads to? Their users are the product, people they cannot sell ads to are not welcomed. Places they cannot maintain business presence == they cannot sell ads == users not welcomed.

    • I hope they do.

      They are absolutely a drag on society.

      Ban them.

  • by Sebby ( 238625 ) on Monday July 05, 2021 @01:46PM (#61553284)

    Would permanently get rid of Facebook.

    • Typical. Call for problematic laws to get rid of things you have issues with without thinking about the consequences. If you make services liable for their content, you will have no more services and you can go back to sending physical letters to your friends. And hope the postal service won't be responsible for your content, too, or they might have to open them. Wouldn't you like that?
      • You're kinda hitting the hyperbole button hard-and-fast there. It's not that big a slope from dropping Section 230, which doesn't really seem like that bad an idea after 15 months of mob-enabled censorship, riots and thought-police, much of which winds up discredited in the light of day a few months later, too late for discourse.

        The challenge is that those "services" already censor based on perceived acceptability of the statements, but only answer to themselves. Hong Kong is saying, Fine, take that a ste

        • That there's a million other sites you can go spam all the crap you want on is the key difference. If liability is imposed everywhere, you won't have limitless other platforms when the the big ones censor you. You're also talking about an extremely narrow range of content that's censored, which isn't remotely similar to removing all user content. If you want to talk about bringing back the Holocaust, have at it on Stormfront and 4chan.
          And I personally don't want an internet where the only two legal options
      • by Sebby ( 238625 )

        Apparently I'll have to put BIG BOLD "sarcasm" tags on some of the stuff I post, given how clueless some readers are.

  • by zkiwi34 ( 974563 )
    Probably the best for HK even given the Chinese government
  • Reciprocity should be brought back in full force. If China has restrictions on US Companies, we impose the same x2 on Chinese Companies

    But the Rich in the US do not care as long as they get their dividends and the market is raising. Time the US Gov starts working for the people

  • by hdyoung ( 5182939 ) on Monday July 05, 2021 @02:18PM (#61553350)
    This has been made perfectly clear in the last 6 months. And none of those western outfits are operating on the mainland, are they. These companies should be making exit plans from HK because the CCP wants nothing to do with them.
    • by pavon ( 30274 )

      Google has multiple offices in China [about.google]. I think the others do as well.

      • by Luckyo ( 1726890 )

        More interesting here would the be office in HK itself. Iirc it has one. But yes, pretty much all SV majors have an office around Guangdong province (either in Shenzhen or Guangzhou) and often also offices in Shanghai and Beijing (the primary trade hub and primary political hub). If for no other reason than relevant lobbying.

        The reason why HK offices are more at risk in these things is because Chinese offices were already severely sanitized, and basically no one important for companies represented in those

  • Very interesting. By the way i find this article https://computools.com/how-muc... [computools.com] useful. Maybe you'll find it useful too
  • I believe it was Google that tried to operate in China once, until they simply didn't want to put up with all the BS anymore and basically said: we will still offer our services from the other side of the Great Firewall. If stuff gets censored and blocked, that's on the chinese government, and not on us.
    This, sadly, seems to be the only half-way ethical way of dealing with the situation.
    Credit where credit is due: this obviously resulted in Google being almost non-existent inside China, which is a huge lo
  • Get out of here, be gone with your shitty platforms.

    All they do is cause issues. They are all cancer, just ban them already.

  • what did they expect? free-reign and non-interference? RIP HK you shall be missed.
  • Why not just say Chinese government?
  • So I hardly think that American corporates are in the position to warn or threaten HK government. This used to be an island under the management of the UK. But since 1997, this is directly and legally part of China, the island now is under the governance of the Chinese government and doesn't have its own government anymore. If there's going to be any warning or threats, it will come from the other side, against American companies operating in HK.

    In fact, the Chinese government wants these companies to l
  • According to NYT, the main feature of the law that the boys don't like is that it makes them responsible for anyone doxxing public officials on their sites, such as police.

Programmers do it bit by bit.

Working...