Company: CHOW
Filing Date: 2025-02-28
Form Type: DRS/A
Source: 0001493152-25-008591
Chunk: 129

Company: ChowChow Cloud International Holdings Ltd
Filing Date: 2025-02-28
Form: DRS/A
Chunk 129
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 as required by relevant applicable laws and regulations. We expect to procure and maintain business interruption insurance or key-man insurance in the future. We believe that our insurance coverage is adequate to cover our key assets, facilities, and liabilities.

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PROPERTIES

We are headquartered in Hong Kong.

We have leased an office at Hong Kong. The following table sets forth the location, approximate size, primary use and lease term of our major leased facilities as of December 31, 2023.

LEGAL PROCEEDINGS

We are currently not a party to any material legal or administrative proceedings, which will cause serious interference to our commercial operation. We may from time to time be subject to various legal or administrative claims and proceedings arising from the ordinary course of business. For the relevant risks, see “Risk Factors — Risks related to Our Business — Failure to comply with laws and regulations applicable to our business could subject us to fines and penalties and could also cause us to lose customers or otherwise harm our business.”

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<div align='center'>Regulation</div>

This section sets forth a summary of the most significant rules and regulations that affect our business activities in Hong Kong.

Personal Data (Privacy) Ordinance (Cap. 486) of Hong Kong), or the PDPO

The PDPO imposes a statutory duty on data users to comply with the requirements of the six data protection principles (the “Data Protection Principles”) contained in Schedule 1 to the PDPO. The PDPO provides that a data user shall not do an act, or engage in a practice, that contravenes a Data Protection Principle unless the act or practice, as the case may be, is required or permitted under the PDPO. The six Data Protection Principles are:

| ● | Principle                                            
 1—purpose and manner of collection of personal data; |

| ● | Principle                                              
 2—accuracy and duration of retention of personal data; |

| ● | Principle               
 3—use of personal data; |

| ● | Principle                    
 4—security of personal data; |

| ● | Principle                                    
 5—information to be generally available; and |

| ● | Principle                  
 6—access to personal data. |

Non-compliance with a Data Protection Principle may lead to a complaint to the Privacy Commissioner for Personal Data (the “Privacy Commissioner”). The Privacy Commissioner may serve an enforcement notice to direct the data user to remedy the contravention and/ or instigate prosecution actions. A data user who contraven