ie8 fix

In China, spying on citizens moves to a new level

By | August 13, 2007, 2:14pm PDT

China Public Security Technology sounds like the R&D outfit of some nameless, faceless Communist bureaucracy. It is after all the organization that is deploying 20,000 surveillance cameras along streets in Shenzhen in southern China along with software to do facial recognition. It is also the outfit that is programming the chips that will be inserted in residency cards for most citizens of a city with a population of 12 million.

But CPST is not a Chinese agency, it’s a company incorporated in Florida and funded by American investment funds and investment banks, the New York Times reports.

Data on the chip will include not just the citizen’s name and address but also work history, educational background, religion, ethnicity, police record, medical insurance status and landlord’s phone number. Even personal reproductive history will be included, for enforcement of China’s controversial “one child” policy. Plans are being studied to add credit histories, subway travel payments and small purchases charged to the card.

The Chinese government has ordered all large cities to apply technology to police work and to issue high-tech residency cards to 150 million people who have moved to a city but not yet acquired permanent residency.

Clearly the moves are intended to fight crime and terrorism. But even CPST acknowledges the technology is a way to control the population.

“If they do not get the permanent card, they cannot live here, they cannot get government benefits, and that is a way for the government to control the population in the future,” said Michael Lin, the vice president for investor relations at China Public Security Technology, the company providing the technology.

Large-scale surveillance in China is more threatening than surveillance in Britain, which boasts several hundred video cameras, civil rights activists said.

“I don’t think they are remotely comparable, and even in Britain it’s quite controversial,” said Dinah PoKempner, the general counsel of Human Rights Watch in New York. While most countries issue identity cards, and many gather a lot of information about citizens, China also appears poised to go much further in putting personal information on identity cards, Ms. PoKempner added.

China is poised to track citizens’ whereabouts via their cellphones and identity cards.

When a police officer goes indoors and cannot receive a global positioning signal from satellites overhead, the system tracks the location of the officer’s cellphone, based on the three nearest cellphone towers. Mr. Huang used a real-time connection to local police dispatchers’ computers to show a detailed computer map of a Shenzhen district and the precise location of each of the 92 patrolling officers, represented by caricatures of officers in blue uniforms and the routes they had traveled in the last hour.

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Richard Koman

http://government.zdnet.com/?page_id=3731

Biography

Richard Koman

Richard Koman is an attorney admitted to practice in California. As a technology writer since the mid-1980s, Richard Koman has documented the role of computing in the transformation of the graphic arts, the growth of the Web and the birth of the peer-to-peer phenomenon. He worked as a book and web editor for O'Reilly Media throughout the 1990s, editing several influential websites and numerous best-sellers. As a lawyer, as well as a tech writer, he brings a unique perspective to the blog's intersection of law, government and technology.
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CHINA SPYING
peterlprice@... 3rd Sep 2007
BUSH IS DOING IT NOW. AND THE WORTHLESS CONGRESS SAID OK.
WHY NOT HAVE A NEW ELECTION AND HAVE TERM IN THE HOUSE OF TWO.

SENATE ALSO TWO. AND PEOPLE WILL VOTE ON IT, AND I BET THEY GO FOR IT.

PLP
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China is the tesing ground...
Linux User 147560 13th Aug 2007
once perfected, we will see it here. devil
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re: China is the tesing ground...
M.R. Kennedy 14th Aug 2007
Mighetto? Izzat you?
Is it any surprise that a company making this sort of thing would have as their first customer Daddy Bush's old buddies and be operating in Jeb's kingdom? I'm guessing we will have our mandatory identification chips surgically inserted right after the 2008 elections are postponed.
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"I'm guessing. . ."
TBearr 25th Aug 2007
On 8/20/07 gardoglee wrote:

"Is it any surprise that a company making this sort of thing would have as their first customer Daddy Bush's old buddies and be operating in Jeb's kingdom? I'm guessing we will have our mandatory identification chips surgically inserted right after the 2008 elections are postponed." [emphasis added]

"I'm guessing. . ." You do that alot.
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CHINA SPYING
peterlprice@... 3rd Sep 2007
BUSH IS DOING IT NOW. AND THE WORTHLESS CONGRESS SAID OK.
WHY NOT HAVE A NEW ELECTION AND HAVE TERM IN THE HOUSE OF TWO.

SENATE ALSO TWO. AND PEOPLE WILL VOTE ON IT, AND I BET THEY GO FOR IT.

PLP
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China is a Evil country
Mectron 13th Aug 2007
China is evil and should be ban from any international trades until it is cleanup of communist and the population free from oppression. The US company who sold the illegal snooping thecnology should be close immediatly and its owner jailaid for life for selling hightech equipment to and hostil contry
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china is a evil country
Dav Eka 17th Aug 2007
Helpful hint: Your comments would be much better received by readers if you paid even passing attention to spelling, tense, and sentence construction. Content does not trump structure, regardless of what is said in our ersatz US educational community. By the way, I largely agree with you. Here is you comment edited: China is country governed by an evil system. It should be banned from international commerce until it is cleansed of Communism, and its population freed from oppression. The US company responsible for creation and sale of this technology should be immediately closed, and its senior management investigated for violation of international protections of human and civil rights.
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Waste of Money
SpaceCowboyNJ 13th Aug 2007
It's not like the Chinese govt has much money anyway. Why waste it on this? If they want greatness they need to free the people. They are a great, great people. All they need is some freedom. The values are already there with many of them. Communism may be powerful but China is much older and much, much more powerful.
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Actually they have more $$$
Linux User 147560 14th Aug 2007
than you think... and that is something most don't realize is the financial stranglehold they have on the US. China has done what no one thought a communist nation could do... they are using capitalism and they are using it very effectively. devil
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Duh'bya must be taking notes on CPST.
Mr. Roboto 13th Aug 2007
n/t
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In China???
Media-Ted@... 15th Aug 2007
Taking notes???

Doesn't it seem strange that the last bastian of Communism/Totalitarianism is coming to Florida, The U.S. of A. to get their product?

If only it was coupled with M$, we could be assured of worldwide freedom, but if not, a system that works would effectively control everything, ... especially to change the data as required.

Hollywood gave us "The Net", "The Silent American", and "Wag The Dog"; Florida is giving the world what is already here, but undeployed until the test results are in. I'm just wondering: with all the cell phones in use world wide; why issue a card? Oh yes, to require their involuntary use to eat, drink and be controlled.

Oh well, it's just one of the perks of being born.
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those silverd milar bags that new computer circuit boards come in. That should block the signals. Knew they would come in handy for something!

PS that is why I like the iphone so much, no GPS in it. Apple is anti-big brother, remember that the next time you need a computer too.

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