Xiaomi to set up India customer data centre


New Delhi, Oct 27 (IANS): Chinese handset maker Xiaomi Monday said it plans to set up a data centre in India by 2015 to store local users data to tackle issues regarding security concerns as the Indian Air Force (IAF) earlier raised concerns over the data security of the handset and asked its personnel not to use 'Xiaomi Redmi 1s'.

"We have started dialogue with the service providers in India and we are hopeful that by 2015 a data centre in India will be up and running," Xiaomi India's head Manu Jain told IANS.

"Since early 2014, we have been migrating our services and corresponding data for Indian users from our Beijing data centers to Amazon AWS data centers in Singapore and USA. Parts of this migration will be completed by the end of October, and all of it will be completed by the end of 2014.

"In 2015, we plan to launch a local data center in India to serve the needs of (and store data for) our Indian users. These efforts help significantly improve the performance of our services and also provide some peace of mind for users in India, ensuring that we treat their data with utmost care and the highest privacy standards," an official statement issued by the company said here.

Xiaomi is famous for its low-priced feature-rich smartphones and is known as the 'Apple of China'.

Earlier, the IAF asked its personnel and their families to stop using the Chinese 'Xiaomi Redmi 1s' phones as these are believed to be transferring data to their servers in China and could be a security risk.

"We are trying to get to the bottom of this. So far, we have not heard anything from the IAF or any other authorities and have only read media reports. We will reach out to the authorities and engage with them to address the issue," Xiaomi vice president Hugo Barra said.

Earlier this year, a Finnish digital security firm F-Secure, demonstrated through tests how Redmi 1S phones were sending the service provider's name, the phone's IMEI and number to a server in China.

In a post on the firm's official Facebook page last week titled "We're moving your data", Barra said Xiaomi had begun moving data of non-Chinese users to servers in the US and Singapore. It said future plans include transfer of data of the Indian users to servers within India.

The decision to migrate data, however, is unrelated to the recent IAF advisory.

"The migration process, which began earlier this year, will be completed by the end of October and will benefit users in international markets, including our customers in India, Hong Kong, Indonesia, Malaysia, the Philippines, Singapore, and Taiwan," Barra said.

Stressing that it does not collect any user data without permission, Barra said the company collected data only after users' permission to get specific services like cloud.

"We don't have a revolutionary product. Like many other messaging services, we also offer messaging, backup, cloud services to our customers. We also have the highest standards of encryption to ensure that users' data is safe," he said.

Xiaomi entered the Indian market in July 2014 with its Mi3 smartphone priced at Rs.13,999 through e-commerce firm Flipkart. It currently has the Redmi 1S device in the country and is estimated to have sold about half a million Redmi devices and 120,000 Mi3 handsets.

  

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Comment on this article

  • vikramjeet ray, chhattisgarh

    Fri, Oct 31 2014

    Xiaomi redmi 1s for purchase for this month plz inform the service center and performance this set

    DisAgree Agree Reply Report Abuse


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