• Communism by points surveillance: China activates a technology to measure the "social value" of each citizen

  • Surveillance Chinese Police Wear Facial Recognition Glasses to Detain Suspects

It is a perverse, ambiguous and largely random system that has been made possible thanks to the combination of Big Data, cameras with facial recognition, Internet monitoring and social networks.

A mechanism to control the lives of 1.4 billion people, despite the fact that many of them are unaware of their existence or that the rules are applied differently depending on the province in which they are located.

Its aim is to

punish citizens that the state has classified as "unreliable"

.

Citizens "unreliable" for the Chinese state are those with debts, the unbelievers or simply those who the regime considers to have spread false information on the Internet or social networks.

A series of conducts that, although in many cases are not classified as criminal offenses, are considered "a disgrace" by the State and deserving of punishment.

Even

ambiguous behavior such as "offering insincere apologies" is punished

.

One such "disgraced" person in the eyes of the Chinese state is He's uncle.

His story is told in the book La Cara Oculta de China, written by Isidre Ambrós.

He is a young university student from Beijing who discovered the social credit system when her uncle was taking longer than expected to arrive at the

New Year's celebration at the family home

.

A relatively easy trip from a nearby city connected by a high-speed train.


However, his uncle had a financial debt that he had not been able to cope with.

This meant that the Chinese government hung

the

sanbenito

of "unreliable"

turning him into one of the 6 million Chinese who cannot ride high-speed trains.


In addition to the 6 million people punished without being able to travel on high-speed trains, there are

27 million Chinese who are prohibited from riding on airplanes

because of the social credit system.

Other punishments for "unreliable" citizens that Ambrós collects in his book are

restrictions to access certain entertainment venues

, slower internet connections or impediments to access a job because they do not call you in interviews.

"The points-based license that the Chinese government has promoted for some time now joins the range of tools promoted by the country's president, Xi Jinping, to

punish the uncivil behavior of many Chinese

, who may be tempted to drive without a license or stop paying their debts. The problem is that this initiative, applicable for a period of time, can lead to a social division between good and bad citizens in a country full of envy, "Ambros tells PIXEL.

In his book, the author uses the metaphor of the carrot and the stick to refer to the logic that this system uses.

The carrot would be found in that those citizens who carry out volunteer work or do extra work at the university will have a positive score that will help

them to be called in interviews and get a good job

.

In addition to the controversial social credit system

The Hidden Face of China

has

61 striking stories

that range from the use of rap music for propaganda purposes by the government to the war against toilet paper thieves.

Some stories elaborated after an

extensive experience of more than 10 years

in the Asian giant by the author.

According to the criteria of The Trust Project

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