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India bans 47 more Chinese mobile apps
by Staff Writers
New Delhi (AFP) July 27, 2020

India has banned 47 more Chinese apps just weeks after blocking the highly popular video-sharing platform TikTok and 58 others over national security and privacy concerns, an information ministry official and media reports said Monday.

Tensions between the world's two most-populous nations soared last month after a Himalayan border clash that left 20 Indian troops dead and an unknown number of Chinese casualties.

"We have banned 47 mobile apps from China in this ongoing exercise which highlights the government's seriousness about data privacy and security," the official, who asked to remain anonymous, told AFP.

"The order was issued on Friday. Most of these 47 apps are banned for the same reasons as the earlier 59, and many were lite versions or variants of the earlier banned applications."

There has been no official statement or order released by the government about the ban but it has been widely reported across major Indian media.

Anti-China sentiment has soared since the deadly fight in mid-June, which sparked street protests and calls for Chinese products to be banned in the nation of 1.3 billion people.

Local media on Monday said 275 other Chinese apps could also be on the chopping block over similar concerns, including the hugely popular "PUBG Mobile" game owned by tech giant Tencent.

From toys, cosmetics and handbags to home appliances, pharma, auto components, and steel, China exports more than 3,000 products to India.

bb/grk/mtp

Tencent


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Foreign misinformation campaigns can be tracked in real time, research shows
Washington DC (UPI) Jul 22, 2020
How can governments, online platforms and internet users curb the influence of foreign misinformation campaigns? Research published Wednesday in the journal Science Advances suggests it is possible to identify bad actors, or trolls, in real time using machine learning algorithms. According to researcher Jacob Shapiro, a professor of politics and international affairs at Princeton University, misinformation campaigns can reveal themselves in two main ways. "To have influence, coord ... read more

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