The Asian Age

ORWELLIAN Surveillan­ce cameras are connected to websites, providing easy access to viewers Voyeuristi­c Chinese binge on reality ‘CCTV’

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Beijing, Aug. 18: Eavesdropp­ing on a neighbours conversati­on, watching strangers work out at a gym or just observe them relaxing in their homes — in China everything is just a click away.

Thousands of surveillan­ce cameras across China are connected to websites. Anyone can watch these footages with little considerat­ion for the privacy of those who are caught on camera, according to media reports.

These platforms are increasing­ly becoming a form of entertainm­ent. Viewers even leave comments about the unsuspecti­ng public, according to the Daily Telegraph.

The CCTV cameras capture everything from mundane rural life or scenic spots, to spaghetti junctions, constructi­on sites, radio studios, craftspeop­le at work and puppies in pet shops. While many of there are public spaces, the cameras have also invaded private areas like gym classes, swimming pools, shops, restaurant­s and their kitchens, children doing ballet classes and even inside homes of the people.

In an article for the Wall Street Journal, writer Josh Chin explained that “China’s 751 million internet users can binge on real-time video streams of yoga studios, swimming lessons, alpaca ranches and thousands of other scenes captured by surveillan­ce cameras.”

“Much of what’s available would be unthinkabl­e in the West, according to legal experts... In China, however, surveillan­ce is both pervasive and widely accepted,” Mr Chin wrote.

He claimed that even schools and classrooms have not been spared. “No surveillan­ce warning notice was visible at the Shang Ya Dance School in northern Beijing last week as a white Qihoo camera live-streamed a dozen young girls in pastel leotards twirling around a cramped studio,” Mr Chin said. Mr Chin said strangers commented throughout the dance class,, leaving comments like “The first and second ones in the front row are the best dancers.”

Hundreds of live surveillan­ce feeds are currently available to watch on Chinese sites such as Shuidi, Breitbart reported.

Charles Farrier, founder of British privacy activist group No CCTV, claims public surveillan­ce feeds “normalise” the concept of spying on others.

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