China introduces new cross-border data transfer rules, effective January 2026

China introduces new cross-border data transfer rules, effective January 2026

Chinese regulators released new requirements this week for certifying cross-border transfers of personal information. The rules require “non-critical information infrastructure operators” to obtain certifications before transferring certain data across borders.The framework aims to protect personal information rights and facilitate secure cross-border data flows, according to statements from China’s cyberspace and market regulators, news agency Reuters reported. The new rules take effect January 1, 2026.

China fines Dior for ‘mishandling’ customer data

Last month, Chinese police fined the Shanghai subsidiary of the French fashion house Dior after finding the company guilty of transmitting customer data overseas without mandated security screening, according to state media. The investigation, which was conducted by the cyber police, was initiated following media reports of a data breach at the brand as Chinese users received alert text messages from Dior. Citing the National Cybersecurity Notification Centre, state news agency Xinhua reported that the findings indicated multiple violations of China’s Personal Information Protection Law by Dior Shanghai.

The violations specified by the cyber police included:

Unauthorised data export: Sending the personal data of customers in China to the Dior headquarters in France without first carrying out a required data export security assessment.Lack of compliance: Failing to establish a standard contract for such data export or failing to obtain a personal information protection certification.Insufficient customer consent: Failing to fully inform customers about how their personal information would be used by the French headquarters.Consent violation: Failing to obtain customers’ “separate consent” for the data transfer to France.



Source link

Visited 3 times, 3 visit(s) today

Related Article

Passengers aboard the Air China flight on Saturday were heard yelling “hurry up” in Korean. Photo: Handout

Battery fire aboard Air China flight to South Korea forces emergency landing

An Air China flight from Hangzhou to Seoul was forced to make an emergency landing in Shanghai on Saturday after a lithium battery caught fire in the plane’s cabin. In a statement on social media, Air China confirmed the incident. “On October 18, on flight CA139 from Hangzhou to Incheon, a lithium battery in a

A man looks to his right and above him is the roof of a hall dotted with white lights circling a red star.

Chinese Communist Party’s Central Committee set for major shake-up at plenum meeting

A key Chinese Communist Party (CCP) meeting next week to decide a strategic plan is expected to include a major shake-up of President Xi Jinping’s inner circle.  Analysts expect a record political purge at the four-day plenum meeting of the CCP’s 205-member Central Committee that starts in Beijing on Monday.  The meeting is to flesh

Ottawa exempts more U.S. and Chinese aluminum and steel imports from retaliatory tariffs

Ottawa exempts more U.S. and Chinese aluminum and steel imports from retaliatory tariffs

The Liberal government is facing pushback after exempting a series of Chinese and U.S. steel and aluminum imports from retaliatory tariffs.  A new order-in-council shows Ottawa has now granted dozens of Canadian companies relief so they don’t have to pay the price for retaliatory tariffs on specific products that businesses argued are in short supply

Gold daily chart

Gold crashes 2% from record high as Trump tempers threats on China

Gold price (XAU/USD) falls 2% after reaching a record high at $4,379 earlier on Friday, tumbles below $4,250, sponsored by US President Donald Trump’s comment that triple-digit tariffs on China are unsustainable. At the time of writing, Bullion prices hover at around the $4,230 – $4,240 range. Bullion tumbles below $4,250 as risk appetite returns

The new trade actions were Trump's reaction to China dramatically expanding its export controls on rare earth elements. (Bloomberg)

Trump says 100% tariffs on China not sustainable, still plans to meet Xi

US President Donald Trump said his proposed 100% tariff on goods from China would not be sustainable, but blamed Beijing for the latest impasse in trade talks that began with Chinese authorities tightening control over rare earth exports. The new trade actions were Trump’s reaction to China dramatically expanding its export controls on rare earth

iPhone Air sells out almost instantly in China

iPhone Air sells out almost instantly in China

When Apple first released the iPhone Air last month, it was missing from a key market: China. This was because the iPhone Air is eSIM-only due to its ultra-thin design, and China has strict regulations about eSIM technology. Today, however, the iPhone Air officially went up for pre-order in China — and indications are it’s