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Coronavirus brings China's surveillance state out of the shadows

Published 02/07/2020, 02:11 PM
Updated 02/07/2020, 02:11 PM
© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Rising sun is seen behind surveillance cameras before a military parade marking the 70th founding anniversary of People's Republic of China

By Yingzhi Yang and Julie Zhu

BEIJING/HONG KONG (Reuters) - When the man from Hangzhou returned home from a business trip, the local police got in touch. They had tracked his car by his license plate in nearby Wenzhou, which has had a spate of coronavirus cases despite being far from the epicenter of the outbreak. Stay indoors for two weeks, they requested.

After around 12 days, he was bored and went out early. This time, not only did the police contact him, so did his boss. He had been spotted near Hangzhou's West Lake by a camera with facial recognition technology, and the authorities had alerted his company as a warning.

“I was a bit shocked by the ability and efficiency of the mass surveillance network. They can basically trace our movements with the AI technology and big data at any time and any place,” said the man, who asked not to be identified for fear of repercussions.

Chinese have long been aware that they are tracked by the world's most sophisticated system of electronic surveillance. The coronavirus emergency has brought some of that technology out of the shadows, providing the authorities with a justification for sweeping methods of high tech social control.

Artificial intelligence and security camera companies boast that their systems can scan the streets for people with even low-grade fevers, recognize their faces even if they are wearing masks and report them to the authorities.

If a coronavirus patient boards a train, the railway's "real name" system can provide a list of people sitting nearby.

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Mobile phone apps can tell users if they have been on a flight or a train with a known coronavirus carrier, and maps can show them locations of buildings where infected patients live.

Although there has been some anonymous grumbling on social media, for now Chinese citizens seem to be accepting the extra intrusion, or even embracing it, as a means to combat the health emergency.

“In the circumstances, individuals are likely to consider this to be reasonable even if they are not specifically informed about it,” said Carolyn Bigg, partner at law firm DLA Piper in Hong Kong.

NEW TECHNOLOGIES

Telecoms companies have long quietly tracked the movements of their users. China Mobile promoted this as a service this week, sending text messages to Beijing residents telling them they can check where they have been over the past 30 days. It did not explain why users might need this, but it could be useful if they are questioned by the authorities or their employers about their travel.

“In the era of big data and internet, the flow of each person can be clearly seen. So we are different from the SARS time now,” epidemiologist Li Lanjuan said in an interview with China’s state broadcaster CCTV last week, comparing the outbreak to a virus that killed 800 people in 2003.

"With such new technologies, we should make full use of them to find the source of infection and contain the source of infection."

The industry ministry sent a notice to China’s AI companies and research institutes this week calling on them to help fight the outbreak. Companies have responded with a flurry of announcements touting the capabilities of their technology.

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Facial recognition firm Megvii said on Tuesday it had developed a new way to spot and identify people with fevers, with support from the industry and science ministries. Its new “AI temperature measurement system”, which detects temperature with thermal cameras and uses body and facial data to identify individuals, is already being tested in a Beijing district.

SenseTime, another leading AI firm, said it has built a similar system to be used at building entrances, which can identify people wearing masks, overcoming a weakness of earlier technology. Surveillance camera firm Zhejiang Dahua says it can detect fevers with infrared cameras to an accuracy within 0.3ºC.

In an interview with state news agency Xinhua, Zhu Jiansheng of the China Academy of Railway Sciences explained how technology can help the authorities find people who might be exposed to a confirmed or suspected coronavirus case on a train.

“We will retrieve relevant information about the passenger, including the train number, carriage number and information on passengers who were close to the person, such as people sitting three rows of seats before and after the person," he said.

"We will extract the information and then provide it to relevant epidemic prevention departments."

Latest comments

Communism and socialism require complete control. If you want to be taken care of by your government expect to be controlled by your government.
This technology is *******dangerous, if the government goes bad... People must fight this kind of surveilance system
You see? The truth always comes out, sooner or later. --------- In democratically run countries, where citizens are free and willing to support the country in an honest way to make the population healthier and better off for the benefit of future generations: in those free countries there can be fast progress in building a strong country. Whereas in communist countries there is tremendous suffering of the population because of this COUNTER INTUITIVE energy that exists as a tension between an oppressive, slow-moving, childishly vain and spoiled ruling elite against the population that wants to be free. --- Take the Wuhan ophthalmologist who first reported the outbreak of the new Chinese virus. He was arrested by the ruling elite ARBITRARILY for spreading 'false info' and treated harshly and FORCED to repent and apologize. Imagine the emotional stress this doctor endured to forcibly deny the truth and take punishment from an insensitive, self-protective government?__Keep Huawei out !!
if this is surprising, wait for the day the US surveillance comes the light.
Looks like Canada, Germany, and Britain want to sell us out to the Chinese with their push to put our 5G data into Bejing's pocket. Ouch. I guess those governments are an easy game for Huawei's whining of having invested millions in those countries. --- As long as the CPP and Xi don't release the arbitrarily arrested Canadian citizens who are being held in China as hostages for Meng, the non-Chinese governments have zero biz to implement 5G via Huawei ANYWHERE outside China or anywhere in the free world for that matter. China is not free and so are all communist or tyrannized countries. Why should the free world place their valuable data into the hands of communist dictatorships? -- Someone please explain that to me and also how Germany, Canada, and Britain can have delusions about cheap 5G when the real costs are deeply hidden in future hostageships of our data for ransom.
John Conner warned us about all this.
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