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China Privacy

China Shows Its Dominance in Surveillance Technology (ft.com) 44

Chinese companies have made every submission to UN on standards in past three years, Financial Times reports [the link may be paywalled]. From the report: Chinese companies have made every submission to the UN for international standards on surveillance technology in the past three years, according to documents reviewed by the Financial Times that show their rising dominance in the field. The UN's International Telecommunication Union (ITU), which has 200 member states and establishes common global specifications for technology, has received 20 standards proposals since 2016 from Chinese companies including China Telecom, ZTE, Huawei and surveillance camera giants Hikvision and Dahua.

The majority of the proposals relate to how footage from facial recognition cameras and recordings by audio surveillance devices are stored and analysed, and were submitted to a section of the ITU where experts say representation from European and US organisations is exceptionally light. Half of the standards have already been approved, even though concerns are rising about how Chinese companies are gaining access to the personal data of individuals around the world.

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China Shows Its Dominance in Surveillance Technology

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  • We've got this. (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Friday December 27, 2019 @12:06PM (#59562252)

    We're in your phone. We're in your tablet. We're in your smart car, smart TV, in your computers, in your Ring doorbell, in your Echo, we're even in your tooth fillings.

    Face it. You're essentially tagged and branded just like a cow put out to pasture.

  • Germany, 1941-

    Nazi-led Germany state agencies have made every submission for the international standards on genocide and racially-motivated imprisonment of civilian populations. Pro-genocide pundits are baffled regarding the strong, sudden lead Germany has taken on this key new technology; however, concerns are now rising about how Germany has collected its standards data and whether it can apply to other target groups.
    • Cause they and China don't differ in morals or totalitarianness, you know?

      Post-reality-distortion-bubbles, of course.

      • by sycodon ( 149926 )

        China is better at keeping their atrocities secret.

        BTW, China murdered more people than Hitler even knew existed.

        • by cusco ( 717999 )

          [citation needed]

          • by caseih ( 160668 )

            Actually it's not that hard to find estimates that put it at least as high as the Nazi genocides. This wikipedia article sums up the estimates from a fair number of historians and researchers: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

            Estimates vary, but 20 million people would not be far off the mark, and not far off of what the Nazis did.

            If you count communist and despotic regimes across the planet over the last 100 years, the number of people killed could be as high as 100,000,000.

            • by cusco ( 717999 )

              Mao and the communists were nasty, but were still better than what came before. A friend grew up the son of missionaries in western China in the 1920s and '30s. Three million people died of starvation in a single year of famine, while in eastern China they were still exporting rice because Japan and and India would pay more than starving peasants could.

    • ... human beings (unfortunately)
  • Red technology!
  • It cannot be, that we are not number one in something! /s

    . . .
    Seriously, it'd be funny if it wasn't realistic though...

  • by DrMrLordX ( 559371 ) on Friday December 27, 2019 @04:49PM (#59563230)

    It's hard to understand the summary exactly without reading the paywalled source article.

    Why would Chinese firms be submitting surveillance "standards" to the UN? For what purpose? Who even created these standards? Why in the hell does the ITU maintain standards about how video and audio will be stored from spy cameras? The whole things seems . . . weird, and possibly irrelevant.

    • by cusco ( 717999 )

      Hikvision is trying to get its cameras accepted as a standard security surveillance device, Dahua is trying to break out of the cheap home security system market and into commercial security where the real money is. Both companies have improved their products the last few years, although they're still miles behind Axis or Pelco, but their equipment has such a bad name that it will take years before security professionals will give them a second glance. I think ZTE has a new-ish CCTV system. I suspect the

      • That supplies some clarification. If this article was meant to be another "China did something bad today" story, one would think that the decision of Chinese firms to submit to the ITU instead of the IEEE describes some potentially-nefarious intent (namely: seeking UN enforcement power). It's one thing to want to improve your reputation, it's another to "push around even the likes of AT&T if they get backing from UN member states".

        • The breadth of surveillance and associated technologies is shaping an unprecedented universe of social control. Why are the authorities in the process of implementing this system of generalized surveillance, of population control? And then, more generally, why is China taking so much effort to develop artificial intelligence? There is a main reason for this: to take the lead in the international system. https://downloader.vip/vpn/ [downloader.vip] https://flatwow.in/sai-mannat/ [flatwow.in] https://anydesk.vip/ [anydesk.vip]

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