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Between Click and Consent: China Revisits the Rules of the Internet

China released draft rules to regulate online personal data collection and use, aiming to protect user rights, limit excessive gathering, and improve transparency

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Angel Marryam

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Between Click and Consent: China Revisits the Rules of the Internet

In the digital world, collection often feels invisible. A click here, a form there, and personal details begin to travel — quietly, quickly, and usually without ceremony. It is within this unseen movement that governments increasingly seek to intervene, not with spectacle, but with structure.

China has issued draft regulations aimed at governing how personal information is collected from the internet and used by applicants, as part of broader efforts to safeguard users’ rights and improve transparency. The proposed rules set out clearer boundaries around what data can be gathered, how it may be processed, and under what conditions it can be reused.

According to the draft, organizations would be required to justify the necessity of the information they collect, limiting practices that rely on excessive or unrelated data gathering. The regulations also emphasize informed consent, seeking to ensure that users understand how their information is being used rather than accepting terms by default.

The move reflects China’s ongoing push to refine its digital governance framework, following earlier laws focused on data security and personal information protection. Together, these measures aim to standardize behavior across platforms, applicants, and service providers in an online ecosystem that has grown faster than its rules.

Transparency plays a central role in the proposal. Applicants using online data would face stricter disclosure requirements, while regulators would gain clearer authority to intervene when practices fall outside defined limits. The intent, officials say, is not to slow innovation, but to align it with accountability.

As with many draft regulations, the document opens a period for public feedback before finalization. That process may shape how strictly the rules are applied and how they interact with existing compliance obligations for companies operating online.

For users, the changes may not be immediately visible. Screens will still load, services will still function. But beneath that continuity, the pathways through which personal information moves are being quietly redrawn — an attempt to make the invisible rules of the internet a little more legible.

AI Image Disclaimer: Illustrations were created using AI tools and are not real photographs.

Sources: Reuters South China Morning Post Caixin

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