White House has raised concerns about China's new cyber-security law
White House has raised concerns about China's new cyber-security law
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The White House said on Thursday that it raised worries about China's new cyber security law amid a meeting with a Chinese authority after the most recent round of talks between the two nations on cyber crime.

U.S. National Security Adviser Susan Rice met with Chinese State Councilor Guo Shengkun to talk about the significance "of completely adhering " to a hostile to hacking accord marked a year ago between the China and the United States, National Security Council representative Ned Price said.

The deal, expedited amid Chinese President Xi Jinping's state visit to Washington in 2015, incorporated a vow that neither one of the countries would intentionally do hacking for business points of interest.

Rice told Guo that the United States was worried "about the potential effects" of a law that China received in November went for battling hacking and fear based oppression.

Pundits of the law say it undermines to close remote innovation organizations out of different divisions considered "basic," and incorporates disagreeable necessities for security surveys and for information to be put away on servers in China.

Rights advocates additionally say the law will upgrade confinements on China's Internet, officially subject to the world's most advanced online restriction component, referred to outside China as the Great Firewall.

Rice met with Guo after the third round of abnormal state chats on digital security amongst China and the United States was hung on Wednesday.

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