China's expanded export controls pose fresh challenge to
global tech industry
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[September 11, 2020] By
Josh Horwitz
SHANGHAI (Reuters) - The latest additions
to China's list of controlled technology exports could upset a broad
range of industries and raise the possibility that some global tech
giants might have to split off their Chinese operations, legal experts
said.
The new list of technologies under export controls announced on Aug. 28
came as an unwelcome surprise to an industry already grappling with the
uncertainty posed by trade tensions between China and the United States.
The move was initially seen as a means of giving Beijing a say in any
sale of video app TikTok, but advisers to Chinese and foreign firms say
the potential consequences go much further.
"The rules were a surprise to many in the market, and there is a lot of
tension in the tech space at the moment," said Alex Roberts, a corporate
counsel at the Shanghai office of law firm Linklaters.
In addition to recommendation algorithms such as those used by ByteDance-owned
TikTok, the new list of "partially restricted exports" includes drone
and cybersecurity technology, voice recognition software, and
handwriting scanning software.
Companies seeking export of these technologies must first pass reviews
and obtain approvals from China's Ministry of Commerce and Ministry of
Science and Technology."
The revisions could also affect a bevy of multi-national companies that
conduct research and development inside China, adds Nicolas Bahmanyar,
cybersecurity senior consultant at LEAF law firm in Beijing.
"It's very probable that a company with R&D centres in China are going
to face a choice - keep their R&D centre in China, just for China, or
leave China so they can use the tech they develop anywhere in the
world," he said.
The Ministry of Commerce was quick to respond to speculation that the
new rules were aimed mainly at TikTok, saying they were not targeted at
any one company.
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China's flags are seen
near a TikTok logo in this illustration picture taken July 16, 2020.
REUTERS/Florence Lo/Illustration/File Photo
Lawyers that have looked closely at the changes say their broad scope means they
could hit a wide range of companies across different business sectors.
They could change the thinking of companies such as Microsoft <MSFT.O>, consumer
drone manufacturer SZ DJI Technology Co Ltd, video streaming service Zoom Video
Communications <ZM.O>, and Tencent Holdings <0700.HK>, which exports games
worldwide and has a fast-growing overseas cloud-service business.
A Tencent source, which has a slew of overseas subsidiaries and invested
companies, said the company was waiting for clarification on what the rules
would mean for technology-sharing with these units.
"In general it will impact Chinese companies' overseas businesses, mainly
involving those that provide cross-border services," said Raymond Wang, managing
partner at Beijing law firm Anli Partners.
Zoom, for example, employs roughly 500 people in China as engineers working on
product development, according to its prospectus. Microsoft houses Microsoft
Research Asia in Beijing, which has been the origin of a number of advances in
AI.
Zoom and DJI declined to comment. Microsoft and Tencent did not respond to
Reuters' requests for comment.
"It is generally clear from the market reaction that there is some thinking to
be done by numerous businesses with operations in mainland China," said Roberts
of Linklaters.
(Reporting by Josh Horwitz, Brenda Goh in Shanghai, Pei Li in Hong Kong;
Additional Reporting by David Kirton in Shenzhen; Editing by Stephen Coates)
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