U.S. tech giants face hard choices under Hong Kong's new
security law
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[July 08, 2020] By
Brenda Goh and Pei Li
SHANGHAI/HONG KONG (Reuters) - U.S. tech
giants face a reckoning over how Hong Kong's security law will reshape
their businesses, with their suspension of processing government
requests for user data a stop-gap measure as they weigh options, people
close to the industry say.
While Hong Kong is not a significant market for firms such as Facebook,
Google and Twitter, they have used it as a perch to reach deep-pocketed
advertisers in mainland China, where many of their services are blocked.
But the companies are now in the cross hairs of a national security law
that gives China authority to demand that they turn over user data or
censor content seen to violate the law - even when posted from abroad.
"These companies have to totally reassess the liability of having a
presence in Hong Kong," Charles Mok, a legislator who represents the
technology industry in Hong Kong, told Reuters.
If they refuse to cooperate with government requests, he said,
authorities "could go after them and take them to court and fine them,
or imprison their principals in Hong Kong".
Facebook, Google and Twitter have suspended processing government
requests for user data in Hong Kong, they said on Monday, following
China's imposition of the new national security law on the
semi-autonomous city.
Facebook, which started operating in Hong Kong in 2010, last year opened
a big new office in the city.
It sells more than $5 billion a year worth of ad space to Chinese
businesses and government agencies looking to promote messages abroad,
Reuters reported in January. That makes China Facebook's biggest country
for revenue after the United States.
The U.S. internet firms are no strangers to governments demands
regarding content and user information, and generally say they are bound
by local laws.
The companies have often used a technique known as "geo-blocking" to
restrict content in a particular country without removing it altogether.
But the sweeping language of Hong Kong's new law could mean such
measures won't be enough. Authorities will no longer need to get court
orders before requesting assistance or information, analysts said.
Requests for data about overseas users would put the companies in an
especially tough spot.
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A couple takes a selfie during sunset on a waterfront facing the
financial Central district in Hong Kong Jan. 27, 2015. REUTERS/Bobby
Yip/File Photo
"It's a global law ... if they comply with national security law in Hong Kong
then there is the problem that they may violate laws in other countries," said
Francis Fong Po-kiu, honorary president of Hong Kong's Information Technology
Federation.
CONTENT QUESTION
While the U.S. social media services are blocked in mainland China, they have
operated freely in Hong Kong.
Other U.S. internet platforms are also rich with content that is banned in
mainland China and may now be judged illegal in Hong Kong.
U.S. video streaming site Netflix, for example, carries "Joshua: Teenager vs.
Superpower", a 2017 documentary on activist Joshua Wong whose books were removed
from Hong Kong public libraries last week.
"Ten Years", a 2015 film that has been criticised by Chinese state media for
portraying a dystopian future Hong Kong under Chinese Communist Party control,
is also available on its platform.
Netflix declined to comment.
Google's YouTube is a popular platform for critics of Beijing. New York-based
fugitive tycoon Guo Wengui has regularly voiced support for Hong Kong protesters
in his videos. Google did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
None of these companies has yet said how they will handle requests from Hong
Kong to block or remove content, and the risk of being caught in political
crossfire looms large.
"The foreign content players have to rethink what they display in Hong Kong,"
said Duncan Clark, chairman at consultancy BDA China.
"The downside is very big if they get U.S. senators on their backs for
accommodating. Any move they make will be heavily scrutinized."
(Reporting by Brenda Goh and Pei Li; Additional reporting by Cate Cadell in
Beijing and Anne Marie Roantree in Hong Kong; Editing by Jonathan Weber and
Robert Birsel)
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