China's All-Seeing Surveillance State Is Reading Its Citizens' Faces (wsj.com) 105
China's government is using facial-recognition technology to help promote good behavior and catch lawbreakers, reports the WSJ. From the article: Facial-recognition technology, once a specter of dystopian science fiction, is becoming a feature of daily life in China, where authorities are using it on streets, in subway stations, at airports and at border crossings in a vast experiment in social engineering (alternative source). Their goal: to influence behavior and identify lawbreakers. Ms. Gan, 31 years old, had been caught on camera crossing illegally here once before, allowing the system to match her two images. Text displayed on the crosswalk screens identified her as a repeat offender. "I won't ever run a red light again," she said. China is rushing to deploy new technologies to monitor its people in ways that would spook many in the U.S. and the West. Unfettered by privacy concerns or public debate, Beijing's authoritarian leaders are installing iris scanners at security checkpoints in troubled regions and using sophisticated software to monitor ramblings on social media. By 2020, the government hopes to implement a national "social credit" system that would assign every citizen a rating based on how they behave at work, in public venues and in their financial dealings.
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Yelp for people!
I'll look forward to my "People hate me on YELP" sticker
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Sadly, may not be too far away....
In Great Britain, I hear of all the cameras they have all over the place in London....
In the US, look at all the many traffic cameras they now have up in many towns and cities.
Once they're there, not much more of a step to enhance their capabilities.
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I reckon there will be a rise in hat usage. Not just for the hats but for technology you can place in them (presuming it's invented) to confuse such cameras etc.
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Communist China is leading the world in large scale human rights advocacy. China is healthy and growing and its large population demands the government be prepared and sensitive to human rights. Safely observing citizen actions and making necessary corrections to policy are two important concerns of the Chinese People's Government. China's most vocal critic is the U.S. government, who most recently was revealed to be conducting large scale intrusive surveillance on its own citizens. Such a government should
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it's okay, we all look the same to them (oh the irony) -- so, I'd wager that tom cruise would be flagged as being responsible for basically everything.
China's? What about the UK? (Score:1)
Can't wait for this to be exported? China's surveillance? Good Lord, have you seen the number of cameras in the UK? There are more cameras per capita and square meter there than anywhere else in the world. Between that and ANPR, you can't move without the government knowing about it. It's absolutely frightening.
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Too late (Score:5, Insightful)
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Social credit system, anybody remember Black Mirror Season 3, ep 1? (I only remember because it was the first one I watched, and I only watched a handful before giving up on the series, but it was a good one.)
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It's called "creep" for a reason.
And here I thought it was named that way for the person doing all of the camera watching.
But that was in the good old days when people manned the monitors, not now when you point a cam at a monitor and let the computer do the watching for you.
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Re:Too late (Score:5, Insightful)
There will be a sharp drop-off at some point. Something will go too far, and it'll be the thing that finally gets people to wake up. Sadly, it'll probably be when the government(s) decide to openly treat citizens like convicts in a prison, with no freedom to speak of, and full knowledge that you're monitored and judged 24/7/365 everywhere you go, whatever you're doing. China and it's assholery anti-human policies is just the foreshadowing of what's to come. No government ever cedes power back to the citizens; power always seeks more power. There is a small chance that enough people like you and I are paying attention and speaking up, so that everyone else will be aware enough to avoid this sort of extreme dystopian future, but at the moment it's looking rather slim. It might take it being too late and there having to be an uprising. Or perhaps it's all really coming on too slow and subtle, and no one will notice until it's way too late to stop it. Or, even worse: it'll happen, and everyone will have been so thoroughly indoctrinated, that they'll think it's good and right and normal.
I'm actually glad I probably won't live long enough to see it all happen, and even gladder that I don't believe in an afterlife or reincarnation. I don't want to see what happens afterwards.
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We're not trying to say that all surveillance is inherently bad.
Despite best intentions, mankind's history ensures that anything that is abusable will be abused (sooner, not later, and as much as possible).
If people don't regularly raise a stink about enchr
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In 1967, the CIA Created the Label "Conspiracy Theorists"
more [google.com]
Its sad.
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If people don't regularly raise a stink about enchroachment upon liberties, they irrevocably vanish.
Smartphones. The Media. Television. Movies. Social media. Professional sports. There are probably other things that should go on this list, but they're all 'Bread and Circuses', 21st Century Edition. They're distracting the vast majority of people from actually paying attention. Then there's the religion angle: keep the Faithful more concerned about the Afterlife than THIS life -- and more afraid of what the Other Religions want to 'do' to you, than what's going on with your own government. The so-called 'w
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or, blather away all the time on FB about trite and mundane aspects of life, whist keeping truly tight lipped about what one does want actually private, all the way to including use of a separate phone and phone number for said private activity.
I believe that analytics is so good now (and remember if you're in pics others post on FB then you have a FB profile already, it's just not named and is a guid) that social "holes" stand out more than the other methods of enforcing privacy. Because of this I use the
Re:Too late (Score:4, Interesting)
Because of this I use the approach above, though I'll wager neither is all that great at real bulletproof privacy.
I have a close friend who does that. Problem is, no matter how careful you are, you let a word or two slip here and there. They can even glean quite a bit about your personality even from how you write things, what your sense of humor is like, and so on. I don't use any social media anymore, and I don't use my real name online. I know damned well that corporations and the government still have data on me because aside from going completely dark (no internet, no phone, pay cash for everything, etc) I still 'leak' some data. But I'll be damned if I'm going to give it away freely.
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Or people are ok with the trade-offs they think they're ok with and assume those are the actual tradeoffs.
Re: Too late (Score:1)
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I don't believe in an afterlife or reincarnation
What do you suppose reproduction is?
The afterlife will persist without you, the descendants of others will live, and by your genetic relatedness, you too will continue to live in part.
You cannot give up. If you do not fight you will be dragged on anyway, even after your body is gone.
You should reconsider your perception of self. Don't buy the 'individualist' falsehood that is pushed on us all by the plutocrats' media machine. We are all connected, we all live in one another.
Resist how? Not possible. (Score:2)
Too late for them; resist this sort of stuff before it consumes you entirely.
How are you supposed to "resist" extensive surveillance exactly? You have zero control over who puts cameras where. At great effort you can try to arrange your life to avoid cameras, but to what end? It's not really resisting, it's avoiding and will not stop the inevitable spread of cameras and AI as both get cheaper and faster and smaller ad infinitum.
You could also wear masking patterns on the face that fool facial recognitio
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Having your own private surveillance schemes in place is definitely not a bad thing; I personally only run a dashcam as a result of absolutely horrid driving behaviors
Guilty before proven innocent (Score:1)
Mass surveillence IS guilty before proven innocent, no matter what government does it. This is the angle we need to push if we want to stop it. The average person hasn't even begun to arrive at that conclusion, because the average person is too lazy to think.
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"You have nothing to fear if you have nothing to hide."
Catching up? (Score:5, Informative)
So does this mean they'll catch up to the UK soon? Last time I was in London a few years back cameras were everywhere. Their favorite spot is at the tops of escalators and stairs aimed so that even with a hat brim they can catch your face.
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What the UK isn't doing is getting in your face with real-time analysis of your social infractions. This is sort of heading down the advertising road shown in Minority Report and other movies... they want you to know they know who you are, and what you do, and what you like to do...
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What the UK isn't doing is getting in your face with real-time analysis of your social infractions.
How do you know? Yeah, they might not be in your face, but for sure they are collecting the data.
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Another "It's not US it's China" story (Score:5, Informative)
Never forget that OUR surveillance state is rampaging across our lives, cutting off our potential, turning us into cattle. Anything China is doing the western plutocrats are doing better.
It's up to the middle class to stand up and take charge of their own lives. We need to foster community and stand up to the machine, or the entire Earth will be desolated.
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O give it a rest. The US/Western Governments aren't blameless. But it's not even CLOSE to the same. At least 'in theory' in the US we can at any time vote out the people running the show & get rid of any level of surveillance we want. We can as well sue the government to stop them from overreach, as some already have. NOW, does that mean there are 'secret programs' of people doing things a 'free society' shouldn't abide? Sure, probably, but notice those are 'secret', there is no reason for these to be s
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O give it a rest. The US/Western Governments aren't blameless. But it's not even CLOSE to the same. At least 'in theory' in the US we can at any time vote out the people running the show & get rid of any level of surveillance we want.
LOL!
You think they'd allow elections/votes to go forward that would actually, seriously, limit their power and abilities & methods to surveil and control the population? The *only* way such votes/elections would be allowed to go forward is if the 'fix' was already well-in. It would be Russian/Chinese/N. Korean hackers, voter fraud, climate change, stock market crash, terrorist attack...they'd throw something out there to stop it otherwise.
No, taking back freedom and liberty, this far along towards a pol
Facebook government (Score:1)
Social-network-ist regime.
It will rot in new and interesting ways. Life always adapts, intelligent life even more so. My guess is that last resort of resistance is apathy: drag your feet, don't make large transgressions but don't seek or care for rewards from the system, just don't cooperate, make them push and carry you anywhere they want you to go; sort of large scale, out of parliament filibuster done by masses. That's how Roman Empire fell, that's how SSSR fell, that's how British Raj fell, that's how a
In the USA it's called (Score:1)
PRISM
but it's not a big deal since only blessed corporations can use it in their on-boarding process.
EC did a good video on the social credit system (Score:3)
And if even half of that comes to fruition in the final "product" it's terrifying:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lHcTKWiZ8sI
Selling face masks in China (Score:1)
Many All-Seeing Eyes, So Few All-Thinking Brains (Score:1)
Many All-Seeing Eyes, So Few All-Thinking Brains
Hey ... (Score:2)
... it's their country.
It's ours next.
How can this possibly work in China? (Score:5, Funny)
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The western-imported camera recognition software says:
Try again, some one blinked
ad infinitum
Still True Today (Score:2)
"Those who would give up Essential Liberty to purchase a little Temporary Safety, deserve neither Liberty nor Safety." benjamin Franklin
Wait a minute... (Score:2)
Isn't that what the UK has been doing for like... a decade or longer?
Black Mirror as an instruction manual (Score:1)
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nosedive
Lacie Pound (Bryce Dallas Howard) lives in a world where people can rate one's popularity out of five stars, from friends to strangers on the street. Lacie, who is obsessed with being well received, begins the episode with an approval rating around 4.2. She lives with her brother Ryan (James Norton), who has a lower approval rating and does not worry about it. Their lease is expiring, and Lacie is eager to move out to the "luxurious" Pelican Cove, against her brother's
Meanwhile, in No.10 Downing Street... (Score:2)
What's with this Control Stuff? (Score:1)
So is the USA (Score:1)
Face it, there are illegal and unconstitutional camera loadings of American citizens into facial recognition databases without permission occurring at all federal buildings and most airports right now. They even use bus depots.
Fun Fact: still easy to defeat. Still incredibly inaccurate in real world situations.
Facemasks (Score:1)