China Passes Law to Require Encryption Keys from Tech Companies, Cites American Precedent

AP Photo/Andy Wong
AP Photo/Andy Wong

The Chinese government has just passed a security law that reportedly could require technology companies to hand over encryption keys to private data. The law is so controversial that President Obama personally raised concerns about it to President Xi Jinping.

Despite lobbying by the highest levels of the U.S. government and Silicon Valley, Chinese officials say that there is plenty of legal precedent in Western nations for such a law.

For instance, Britain is moving forward on a law that could ban certain kinds of difficult-to-crack encryption, such as the security on the iPhone’s messenger application, which not even Apple can read—so-called “end-to-end” encryption. High-level members of the British government are part of growing movement of officials that want to ban communication that the government can’t read.

So, knowing that Western nations have a long history of spying and encryption cracking, China confidently moved ahead with the law, which could require tech companies to give access to private files and assist in digging through data that the government deems a national security threat.

More details are to come, but this is something that tech companies—and consumers—should be watching carefully.

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