The article discusses the discovery of a malicious app, Pinduoduo's shopping platform, that was secretly collecting and exploiting user data without consent. The app had been developed by a team of engineers and product managers who were later disbanded after their exploits were discovered.
The malware was able to access users' locations, contacts, calendars, notifications, and photo albums, as well as change system settings and access social network accounts and chats. The exploit code was still present in the app even after an update removed it.
Tech policy experts say that Pinduoduo's apparent malware would be a violation of China's data privacy laws, which regulate the collection and processing of personal information. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology is responsible for enforcing these regulations, but they have not taken any action against Pinduoduo.
The incident has raised questions about the effectiveness of oversight in China's tech industry. "They're supposed to check Pinduoduo, and the fact that they didn't find (anything) is embarrassing for the regulator," says Kendra Schaefer, a tech policy expert at Trivium China.
The article also notes that some cybersecurity experts have criticized regulators in China for not understanding technology and being unable to detect malicious code. The incident has sparked discussion on Chinese social media about why regulators have not taken action against Pinduoduo.
In related news, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has published lists of apps that have been removed from app stores for failing to comply with regulations, but Pinduoduo's app was not on these lists.
The malware was able to access users' locations, contacts, calendars, notifications, and photo albums, as well as change system settings and access social network accounts and chats. The exploit code was still present in the app even after an update removed it.
Tech policy experts say that Pinduoduo's apparent malware would be a violation of China's data privacy laws, which regulate the collection and processing of personal information. The Ministry of Industry and Information Technology is responsible for enforcing these regulations, but they have not taken any action against Pinduoduo.
The incident has raised questions about the effectiveness of oversight in China's tech industry. "They're supposed to check Pinduoduo, and the fact that they didn't find (anything) is embarrassing for the regulator," says Kendra Schaefer, a tech policy expert at Trivium China.
The article also notes that some cybersecurity experts have criticized regulators in China for not understanding technology and being unable to detect malicious code. The incident has sparked discussion on Chinese social media about why regulators have not taken action against Pinduoduo.
In related news, the Ministry of Industry and Information Technology has published lists of apps that have been removed from app stores for failing to comply with regulations, but Pinduoduo's app was not on these lists.