Want China Times, Xinhua 2014-09-14
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Chairman and CEO of Qualcomm, Paul Jacobs, speaks at a conference in Las Vegas. (File photo/Xinhua) |
A senior
official with China's internet regulator Wednesday warned that foreign firms
should not harm the country's interests and security while making big money
from this market.
The bottom
line of the Chinese government concerning the management of internet is
national interest and the interests of Chinese consumers, said Lu Wei, director
of the State Internet Information Office, at 2014 Summer Davos in the north
Chinese city of Tianjin.
"We
welcome all foreign companies to do business in China if they stick to this
bottom line," Lu said at a sub-forum about the future of internet
business.
"What
we can not allow is that you undermine the country's interests while doing business
in this market and profiting from it."
When
responding to a question about China's ongoing anti-trust probes, Lu said the
probes do not target any specific company and China is always open to foreign
firms.
"But
we also would like all foreign companies to understand that they should abide
by Chinese laws," he said.
Lu stressed
that the fast development of internet businesses in China proved that the
country's industrial policy is open, and domestic IT firms are also open to
cooperation with foreign counterparts.
The
creativity of Chinese IT firms and high-quality regulation of the Internet also
contributed to the development, he added.
China is
conducting anti-monopoly investigations against Microsoft, Jaguar Land Rover,
and Qualcomm. Paul E. Jacobs, executive chairman of Qualcomm, attended the
forum with Lu.
The
National Development and Reform Commission confirmed in February that it is
conducting an antitrust investigation into the US mobile chip maker.
Jacobs
refused to comment about the anti-trust probe but stressed that the company's
cooperation with Chinese firms is important, mutually beneficial and has great
potential.
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