No small matter – Cyber security in China: what SMEs need to know
Smaller companies can be particularly susceptible to cybercrime as they often lack the resources to fully protect themselves against such attacks.
Smaller companies can be particularly susceptible to cybercrime as they often lack the resources to fully protect themselves against such attacks.
Protecting industrial control systems and communication networks
How to spot and remove counterfeit goods from e-commerce sites in China
Since its launch in 2013, the China (Shanghai) Pilot Free Trade Zone (CSPFTZ or Zone) has been attracting increasing amounts of foreign investment in many sectors.
The European Chamber was established in 2000, with the vision to be the unified, independent and influential voice of European business in China.
As the capital of China’s Heilongjiang province, Harbin is a key political, economic and cultural centre in Northeast China.
There have been many changes in the Chinese economy over the past decade.
Small and medium-sized enterprises (SMEs) collectively accounting for over 99 per cent of all enterprises and creating 85 per cent of all the new jobs in the last five years.
It’s time for a re-set of the European Union’s (EU’s) messy and frequently mismanaged relations with China.
A perennial challenge for SMEs is access to financing, a problem that is particularly prevalent in China according to European companies operating here.
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