- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- world@lemmy.world
A Chinese cybersecurity expert has revealed to DW details of China’s new high-tech policing. From ski resort facial recognition to seats on a train, the system can track anyone and compile a “holistic profile.”
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China’s emerging system of “holographic profiles” [is a] version of a remote tracking system designed for the Public Security Bureau in Zhangjiakou, the Hebei province city that hosted the 2022 Winter Olympics.
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China’s state surveillance machine […] is rapidly evolving from a network of simple street cameras into a data-fused, 24/7, predictive social control behemoth.
For years, China has operated the world’s most extensive CCTV network. A massive initiative known as the “Xueliang” (Bright Eyes) project aims to merge these isolated islands of surveillance spread across the country.
But the data on the Zhangjiakou police dashboard shows the granular detail with which authorities can track an individual.
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This system no longer relies solely on police cameras on street corners; it accurately records the specific train carriage and seat number a target occupies when arriving from Beijing or Shanghai, for example.
It even synchronizes photos taken by facial-recognition ticket gates at local ski resorts directly into its tracking mechanism. The movements of the researcher’s acquaintances who recently skied in Zhangjiakou were precisely flagged and mapped out with detailed trajectories in the system.
“The idea is simply to process as much data as possible from as many sensors as possible in real time,” the researcher noted.
The system logs daily behaviors like gasoline consumption, regular shopping locations and whether an individual frequently visits “petition areas.”
This massive data-fusion effort attempts to stitch together a person’s physical whereabouts, consumption habits and digital footprints into a flawless “holistic personnel archive.”
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Tracking foreign journalists
Within this increasingly airtight net, foreigners — especially journalists and other citizens from Western countries — are being looked at more by authorities.
The system’s “smart report” statistics shows Chinese security agencies disproportionately focus on citizens from the “Five Eyes” countries, comprising the US, the UK, Australia, New Zealand and Canada.
Deep in the backend, certain foreign journalists are assigned a special real-time tracking tag called “trackable.” The moment they step into a jurisdiction, the system can automatically trigger early warnings for the police.
For independent journalism in China, this is an existential threat.
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In the past, foreign reporters traveling to sensitive regions such as Xinjiang often relied on experience to shake off plainclothes police trailing them in the rearview mirror. Now, algorithmic upgrades to the policing system render this traditional cat-and-mouse game obsolete.
“They don’t need to send two or three cars to follow you anymore,” [Chinese cybersecurity expert] NetAskari said.
Because the system has access to your mobile payments, ticket purchases and social networks, authorities can perfectly anticipate your itinerary, ensuring you only see what they want you to see upon arrival.
If the data network detects you interacting with certain individuals, police can simply call and intimidate your sources behind the scenes. In this perfectly closed surveillance loop, the concept of an “under-the-radar investigation” is being systematically eradicated.
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Western democracies are also grappling with controversy over the abuse of surveillance technologies such as Palantir.
But as the researcher NetAskari points out, the comparison with China’s authoritarian system only goes so far.
“In Western democracies, there are debates… In China, this debate doesn’t exist at all. The police and the Ministry of State Security just do whatever they want with relatively little oversight.”
Whether it is a foreign journalist navigating Beijing’s narrow alleys for a story, or a regular tourist vacationing at a ski resort, everyone ultimately dissolves into cold code on a colossal data dashboard.
NetAskari said in this system, people are reduced to numbers, patterns and vector operations. They become “a ‘datamass’ that can be controlled, shaped and coerced as needed.”
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