// Global Analysis Archive
The China Internet Association released self-regulatory pacts covering personal information protection for AI agents and governance for mini-program ecosystems, with major Chinese internet platforms among the first signatories. The move aims to standardize data collection and use practices as agent-based services and embedded app ecosystems expand across platforms.
Hong Kong authorities have advised government units not to install the OpenClaw AI agent or related variants, citing potential risks such as unauthorised data access, leakage, and system intrusion. The Digital Policy Office said no incidents had been reported, indicating a precautionary approach amid wider regional scrutiny of AI agent tools.
The China Internet Association released self-regulatory pacts covering personal information protection for AI agents and governance for mini-program ecosystems, with major Chinese internet platforms among the first signatories. The move aims to standardize data collection and use practices as agent-based services and embedded app ecosystems expand across platforms.
Hong Kong authorities have advised government units not to install the OpenClaw AI agent or related variants, citing potential risks such as unauthorised data access, leakage, and system intrusion. The Digital Policy Office said no incidents had been reported, indicating a precautionary approach amid wider regional scrutiny of AI agent tools.
| ID | Title | Category | Date | Views | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| RPT-5343 | China Internet Association Unveils AI-Agent and Mini-Program Data Protection Pacts Backed by Major Platforms | China | 2026-07-13 | 0 | ACCESS » |
| RPT-2556 | Hong Kong Moves to Restrict OpenClaw AI Agent Use Across Government Over Security Concerns | Hong Kong | 2024-10-15 | 0 | ACCESS » |