At a Beijing summit, Xi Jinping and Vladimir Putin issued a joint statement promising deeper cooperation on information security, cyber-threat response, internet regulation, AI, satellite internet, IoT, and interoperability between China's BeiDou and Russia's GLONASS systems. The statement also emphasized joint software and open-source development to reduce dependence on Western technology and endorsed stronger state control over domestic internet environments.
Why it matters: The agreement signals closer alignment between two major authoritarian states on cyber policy, digital infrastructure and 'internet sovereignty,' with implications for censorship, surveillance, and state-backed cyber operations. It matters to policymakers, civil-society groups and defenders tracking how geopolitical blocs may reshape internet governance and security ecosystems.
2026.05.20
100% relevant
This article establishes a distinct state-level cyber policy development: a new formal Sino-Russian pledge to coordinate on cybersecurity, internet governance, AI and satellite systems.
← Back to all stories