Tencent promised to abide by the provisions of the Anti-Monopoly Law, including refraining from illegal collection and misuse of personal information.
Tencent, Didi Chuxing, and Alibaba’s grocery unit joined Chinese tech peers in promising on Thursday to uphold rules against anticompetitive behavior amid a sweeping crackdown across the sector that began with e-commerce giant Alibaba.
Why it matters: In the wake of Alibaba’s RMB 18.2 billion ($2.8 billion) fine for using “forced exclusivity” tactics, regulators are sharply reining in China’s biggest internet companies.
READ MORE: What is ‘forced exclusivity’? And why did it get Alibaba fined $2.8 billion?
Details: On Tuesday, the Chinese State Administration for Market Regulation (SAMR) convened with the Central Cyberspace Administration of China and the State Administration of Taxation regarding China’s biggest internet companies.
Context: The regulatory crackdown on anti-competitive practices started late last year with small antitrust fines for Alibaba, Tencent, and others, culminating in Alibaba’s record penalty on Saturday.
Updated: revised first bullet point under “Details” for clarity.
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