China orders Didi app downloads suspended over data violation

Reuters

Published Jul 04, 2021 13:16

Updated Jul 04, 2021 23:50

BEIJING (Reuters) -China's cyberspace regulator said on Sunday that it had ordered smartphone app stores to stop offering Didi Global Inc's app after finding that the ride-hailing giant had illegally collected users' personal data.

The Cyberspace Administration of China (CAC) said it had told Didi to make changes to comply with Chinese data protection rules, four days after Didi began trading on the New York Stock Exchange, having raised $4.4 billion in an initial public offering.

The CAC did not specify the nature of Didi's violation in a statement on its social media feed.

Didi responded by saying it had stopped registering new users and would remove its app from app stores. It said it would make changes to comply with rules and protect users' rights.

China has been clamping down on its home-grown technology giants over antitrust and data security concerns.

Didi made its trading debut on Wednesday in an IPO that valued the company at $67.5 billion, well down from the $100 billion it had hoped for, which potential investors had resisted.

Redex Research director Kirk Boodry, who publishes on Smartkarma, said the CAC's move appeared "aggressive".

"(It) indicates the process could take a while, but they have a large installed base so near-term impact (is) likely muted for now," he said.

INVESTIGATION

Didi's app was still working in China for people who had already downloaded it. It offers over 20 million rides in China every day, on average.

CAC on Friday announced an investigation into Didi to protect "national security and the public interest", prompting a 5.3% fall in its share price to $15.53.

The stock was sold at $14 per share in the IPO - the top of the indicated range.

Didi, which offers services in China and more than 15 other markets, gathers vast amounts of real-time mobility data every day. It uses some of the data for autonomous driving technologies and traffic analysis.

Didi had flagged Chinese regulations in its IPO prospectus and said: "We follow strict procedures in collecting, transmitting, storing and using user data pursuant to our data security and privacy policies."