The
United States has joined forces with Japan and the European Union to
pressure China on new bank cyber-security rules that have upset foreign
companies, a senior U.S. official said.
Deputy
Trade Representative Robert Holleyman said the United States would keep
lobbying China to put a hold on the rules, which would force technology
vendors to Chinese banks to hand over secret source code and adopt
Chinese encryption algorithms, until there was a “satisfactory
resolution.”
“We
are working to try to break down those barriers, and we have also
secured support from our allies and trade partners in Japan and the EU,”
Holleyman, who raised the issue with Chinese officials during a visit
to Beijing last week, told the National Lieutenant Governors
Association.
“This is not just a U.S.-led initiative; it’s an important global initiative.”
Brussels
has also raised the issue with Beijing at the ministerial level and
plans to flag its concerns at the World Trade Organization’s next
meeting on technical trade barriers.
“The
EU is concerned by the lack of transparency in the development of these
measures and by the potential impact on EU companies,” a European
Commission spokesperson said.
Chinese
banks had until Sunday to submit plans for how to comply with the new
regulations, which Holleyman said would largely shut U.S. technology and
ATM providers out of the Chinese market. Washington is also pressing
for China to pause the implementation of a draft counterterrorism law
which could hit IT companies as well.
Victoria
Espinel, who succeeded Holleyman as president of lobbying group BSA The
Software Alliance, said the U.S. industry was working “very closely”
with colleagues overseas.
“What
we have been doing very successfully (is) to make clear towards the
United States government, the European government, the Japanese
government (and) the government of China that this is a concern,” she
said.
“It
is not good for Chinese companies to be cut off from being able to
choose the best products and services they want, it’s not good for China
… as an economy.”
U.S. State Department Under Secretary for Economic Growth Catherine Novelli said the combined approach should pay dividends.
“Hearing
these things from so many different channels is the proof that … this
actually is the generally widely held view of those who know about
technology,” she said earlier this month.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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