Aussies fall short in international rules thriller
"There is no question that the majority of countries have gone from a position of neutrality, which was seen as having a limited impact on China," he added.
The world body was already seeking to take a neutral role, and the EU-China summit will now seek to ratify an international consensus on China's sovereignty.
China's foreign ministry on Tuesday denied the claims.
"Any country that has been denied rights under international law, by China or other countries, is trying to make fun of international law," foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying told a daily news briefing.
"The international legal principles have never been questioned, nor should they be questioned."
China and other developed economies insist they have the right to exist as sovereign states in its neighbourhood and there are strong objections to their use of legal structures to assert their position, most notably the US' claims to sovereignty over the West Coast.
China is concerned by claims by Japan and others of sovereignty over the South China Sea in the East China Sea, and by US claims over islands in the Western Pacific, where maritime tensions have led to calls for closer ties between the Asia Pacific region and the West.
But those tensions are also seen as part of China's broader internationalisation drive and are seen by countries including the EU as threats to regional peace and security.
China is the main holder of over 70 percent of the world's outstanding global trade - a figure that is expected to rise to 100 percent next year, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) reports. (Editing by Peter Graff)
온카지노
바카라
Onetel founder defends performance of its services
The Netherlands also has a system for managing personal data. The Netherlands is the second largest consumer of personal data in the world, according to Transparency International's 2012 Global Citizen Survey, which ranked it at fourth.
It's the Dutch company that has taken the lead in establishing an online platform for customers in the Netherlands, where it allows them to make and edit personal information freely and anonymously. The company is also among the biggest advertisers of its services worldwide, with nearly half its ads appearing online in the past 12 months.
The company says it has successfully used its services on the European Commission website and it's using the Dutch data protection legislation to gain more clarity around when the EU's personal data is being treated as personal data.
The Dutch government said Thursday, Nov. 1, it intended to issue a new directive on data protection after new data from internal commission surveys showed that Dutch consumers have become more concerned with their personal data as well as that of Europeans.
Dewerwijk said in a statement that "the data-protection authority in the Netherlands is examining the legal framework and the public interest in applying Dutch law to the use of personal data on the internet".
Dewerwijk said it's considering implementing a separate regulation requiring online firms to provide clear explanations about how personal information is used, what rights people have and how the law applies, and how it can be challenged or modified.
At a press conference, Dewerwijk said "we must protect our citizens' personal data from unauthorized use without compromising civil liberties."
The data protection authority in the Netherlands is examining the legal framework and the public interest in applying Dutch law to the use of personal data on the internet.
The government said it expects companies such as Facebook and Google to apply Dutch data protection law soon, although it has yet to make any concrete commitments.