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  1. 21 de jun. de 2022 · A New York Times analysis of over 100,000 government bidding documents found that China’s ambition to collect digital and biological data from its citizens is more expansive and invasive than ...

  2. 7 de sept. de 2022 · Chin and Lin tell the haunting tale of a Uyghur poet and filmmaker named Tahir Hamut Izgil, who now lives in the U.S. Hamut and his family describe having their blood, iris, fingerprints,...

    • Internet Control in Xi Jinping’s “New Era”
    • Face, Voice, and DNA
    • Social Credit
    • “Internet Sovereignty” and The “China Model”
    • Digital Totalitarianism

    Under Xi Jinping, Chinese authorities have been cracking down on subversive speech on the internet while reinforcing the digital bulwark of PRC information control—the so-called Great Firewall of China—with new technology. Shortly after Xi’s November 2012 accession to the post of general secretary, Chinese authorities began honing their tools for m...

    China has been the world’s fastest-growing user of surveillance cameras, a trend mainly driven by government usage. Over the past decade, technological advances have made these cameras ever more effective instruments for monitoring China’s 1.4 billion people. Today, facial recognition and intelligent analysis—technology that flags objects or events...

    In 2014, China’s State Council announced an ambitious plan made possible by new digital technology: a nationwide Social Credit System that “covers the entire society.” This project would involve tracking the activities and offering assessments of people as well as enterprises. By the target date of 2020, the Council anticipated an entry on each PRC...

    With the PRC striving to build world-leading industries in AI, big-data analytics, and other emerging fields, high-tech companies that have already been working closely with the government on censorship and surveillance, including Alibaba, Baidu (China’s Google), and Tencent (owner of the widely used messaging and payments app WeChat), are on their...

    In July 2017, China’s State Council released a policy plan for attaining global leadership in AI. The PRC aspires to achieve primacy in this cutting-edge field by 2030, investing enough to develop an AI sector worth roughly $150 billion. The State Council document envisions AI “playing an irreplaceable role in effectively maintaining social stabili...

  3. 3 de oct. de 2022 · The Chinese surveillance state uses vast quantities of data and cutting-edge artificial intelligence to build a nimbler form of authoritarianism that’s capable of exercising unprecedented...

  4. 16 de sept. de 2022 · The report – the latest on privacy in the digital age by the UN Human Rights Office* – looks at three key areas: the abuse of intrusive hacking tools (“spyware”) by State authorities; the key role of robust encryption methods in protecting human rights online; and the impacts of widespread digital monitoring of public spaces ...

  5. 14 de jul. de 2022 · Published July 14, 2022 Updated July 15, 2022. 阅读简体中文版 閱讀繁體中文版. Chinese artists have staged performances to highlight the ubiquity of surveillance cameras. Privacy activists have filed lawsuits...

  6. 23 de nov. de 2023 · China’s abundance of CCTV cameras, many equipped with facial-recognition technology, “leave criminals with nowhere to hide”, boasts the People’s Daily, a Communist Party mouthpiece ...