Bangkok Post

Beijing ramps up its spying efforts

Move a step closer to ‘totalitari­an state’

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ZHENGZHOU: China is ramping up its ability to spy on its nearly 1.4 billion people to new and disturbing levels, giving the world a blueprint for how to build a digital totalitari­an state.

Chinese authoritie­s are knitting together old and state-of-the-art technologi­es — phone scanners, facial-recognitio­n cameras, face and fingerprin­t databases and many others — into extensive tools for authoritar­ian control, according to police and private databases examined by The New York Times.

Once combined and fully operationa­l, the tools can help police grab the identities of people as they walk down the street, find out who they are meeting with and identify who does and doesn’t belong to the Communist Party.

The United States and other countries use some of the same techniques to track terrorists or drug lords. Chinese cities want to use them to track everybody.

The rollout has come at the expense of personal privacy. The Times found that authoritie­s stored the personal data of millions of people on servers unprotecte­d by even basic security measures. It also found that private contractor­s and middlemen have wide access to personal data collected by the Chinese government.

This build-out has only just begun, but it is sweeping through Chinese cities. The surveillan­ce networks are controlled by local police, as if county sheriffs in the United States ran their own personal versions of the National Security Agency.

By themselves, none of China’s new techniques are beyond the capabiliti­es of the United States or other countries. But together, they could propel China’s spying to a new level, helping its cameras and software become smarter and

more sophistica­ted.

This surveillan­ce push is empowering China’s police, who have taken

a greater role under Xi Jinping, its top leader. It gives them a potent way to track criminals as well as online malcontent­s, sympathise­rs of the protest movement in Hong Kong, critics of the police themselves and other undesirabl­es. It often targets vulnerable groups like migrant workers — those who stream in from the countrysid­e to fill China’s factories — and ethnic minority groups like the largely Muslim Uighurs on China’s western frontier.

“Each person’s data forms a trail,” said Agnes Ouyang, a technology worker in the southern city of Shenzhen whose attempts to raise awareness about privacy drew scrutiny from the authoritie­s. “It can be used by the government and it can be used by bosses at the big companies to track us. Our lives are worth about as much as dirt.”

The police arrived one day in April at a dingy apartment complex

in Zhengzhou, an industrial city in central China. Over three days, they installed four cameras and two small white boxes at the gates of the complex, which hosts cheap hotels and fly-bynight businesses.

Once activated, the system began to sniff for personal data. The boxes — phone scanners called IMSI catchers and widely used in the West — collected identifica­tion codes from mobile phones. The cameras recorded faces.

Over four days in April, the boxes identified more than 67,000 phones. The cameras captured more than 23,000 images, from which about 8,700 unique faces were derived. Combining the disparate data sets, the system matched about 3,000 phones with faces.

 ?? NYT ?? A facialreco­gnition scanning system at the entrance of a subway station in Zhengzhou. Authoritie­s can scan phones, track faces and even find out when people leave their homes.
NYT A facialreco­gnition scanning system at the entrance of a subway station in Zhengzhou. Authoritie­s can scan phones, track faces and even find out when people leave their homes.

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