Up to 3 Billion Pieces of User Data Stolen From Nearly 100 Tech Companies โ€”Caixin Global

What happened: A third-party developer for Chinese mobile operatorsโ€”China Mobile, China Telecom, and China Unicomโ€”highjacked over 3 billion pieces of user data from some of the countryโ€™s biggest tech companies. Through a business partnership formed in 2014, Shenzhen-listed Ruizhi Huasheng Technology collected user account information from Tencent, WeChat, Alibaba, and up to 93 other companies after placing malicious software on the mobile operatorsโ€™ servers.

Why itโ€™s important: Ruizhi Huasheng used the data for commercial gain by selling it to advertisers. Revenue from the companyโ€™s data-related business increased 16 fold over the past year, rising to RMB 30 million ($4.4 million). The case is the latest in a spate of high profile data breaches. Earlier this year, an investigation found that the personal information of people using delivery appsโ€”including Ele.me and Baidu Waimaiโ€”was being sold for as little as RMB 0.10 per individual. The government has sought to crack down on these sorts of data breaches through the release of standards for handling personal information, but steps like these have had little effect on the illicit, but very lucrative, data market.

Christopher Udemans is TechNode's former Shanghai-based data and graphics reporter. He covered Chinese artificial intelligence, mobility, cleantech, and cybersecurity.

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