Business World

China surveillan­ce firm tracking millions in Xinjiang

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BEIJING — A Chinese surveillan­ce firm is tracking the movements of more than 2.5 million people in the far-western Xinjiang region, according to a data leak flagged by a Dutch Internet expert.

An online database containing names, ID card numbers, birth dates and location data was left unprotecte­d for months by Shenzhen-based facial-recognitio­n technology company Sense Nets Technology Ltd, according to Victor Gevers, co-founder of non-profit organizati­on GDI. Foundation, who first noted the vulnerabil­ity in a series of social media posts the other week.

Exposed data also showed about 6.7 million location data points linked to the people which were gathered within 24 hours, tagged with descriptio­ns such as “mosque,” “hotel,” “internet cafe” and other places where surveillan­ce cameras were likely to be found.

“It was fully open and anyone without authentica­tion had full administra­tive rights. You could go in the database and create, read, update and delete anything,” said Mr. Gevers.

China has faced an outcry from activists, scholars, foreign government­s and United Nations rights experts over what they call mass detentions and strict surveillan­ce of the mostly Muslim Uighur minority and other Muslim groups who call Xinjiang home. BIG BROTHER

According to its Website, SenseNets works with China’s police across several cities. Its Shenzhen-listed parent company NetPosa Technologi­es Ltd has offices in a majority of Chinese provinces and regions, including Xinjiang.

SenseNets and NetPosa, as well as the Xinjiang regional government, did not immediatel­y respond to requests for comment on Sunday.

The Chinese government has ramped up personal surveillan­ce in Xinjiang over recent years, including the constructi­on of an extensive video surveillan­ce system and smartphone monitoring technology.

Mr. Gevers said the foundation directly alerted SenseNets to the vulnerabil­ity, in line with GDI. Foundation protocol. He said SenseNets did not respond, but that it has since taken steps to secure the database. —

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