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  • In preparation for China’s National Day, police in Beijing have sought to avoid disruption

  • by installing surveillance cameras in every corner of the city. In fact, China Daily has

  • reported that 100% of the city is under video surveillance as part of a nationwide project,

  • ominously calledSkynet”. So we wanted to know, just how invasive is China’s mass

  • surveillance?

  • Well, by 2013, China had installed up to 30 million cameras around the country, jumping

  • dramatically from a little under 3 million cameras in 2005. NPR reported finding 11 cameras

  • in a 100 foot radius. 13 million were installed in 2011 alone. And while the cameras do seem

  • to lower crime rates, China’s oppressive government doesn’t just stop there. China

  • is well known to censor and monitor all of its web traffic, and uses this information

  • to imprison journalists and bloggers. China has roughly 2 million internet police alone,

  • who have been cracking down on any form of dissent or protest. The practice of jailing

  • political dissidents has led to China holding the largest number of people arrested for

  • their internet history.

  • But it only gets worse. China is also known to wiretap phones, with one politician found

  • tapping high ranking officials and China’s President. The New York Times has even reported

  • that private phone calls are automatically disconnected when a controversial word, like

  • protest”, is mentioned. And while it may sound paranoid, many hide or disable their

  • cell phones when having potentially dissenting conversations in person. According to NPR,

  • some Chinese citizens suggest that their cell phones can be remotely activated to listen

  • in.

  • So what does China do with all this information? Well, besides imprisoning those they disagree

  • with, they also use it to publicly rate their population. Chinese citizens are given a “social

  • credit score”, which is similar to a regular credit score. The difference is that it is

  • based on private behavior, and affects much more than your car loan. It’s reported that

  • if you badmouth the government online, play video games, or even if one of your friends

  • posts something disagreeable online, your score goes down. And this score can assist or prevent

  • you in receiving a travel visa, a bank loan, or even a job. The government has announced

  • that this system will be mandatory within the next 5 years.

  • Obviously, programs like these are intended to create a fear of dissent. The American

  • Civil Liberties Union has said that this surveillance and judgment system should serve as a warning

  • for the United States. Although China is no longer a totalitarian system, they are unquestionably

  • authoritarian; threatening both pressure and actual arrest for anyone who dares to question

  • the status quo. While the US is unlikely to be as aggressive as China in this regard,

  • the use of mass surveillance in the United States has already seen a huge shift in public

  • perceptions of the government.

  • China alarming new credit score system is just the tip of the iceberg. Watch Seeker

  • Daily to learn more

  • about it. Thanks for watching TestTube News! Please like and subscribe to the channel if

  • you haven’t yet. Have a great one!

In preparation for China’s National Day, police in Beijing have sought to avoid disruption

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