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The Higher People’s Court in the province of Hebei made an app. The app alerts you when people who fail to honour their credit obligations are within 500 yards. The app went live on .
My first question was WTF China?
Here’s the thing. No one is the villain in their own story so its worth trying to understand what they thing this will achieve. Somewhere in China a group of people thought that this was a good idea and signed off on it.
Publicity Department of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Central Committee, the Supreme People’s Court, and the China Banking Regulatory Commission (CBRC), told authorities to complete provincial-level online platforms by the end of this year and to make the public aware of these websites within two years. — 2017–10–10So representatives from the government, the courts and the banks think this is a good idea. The court exposes the debtor’s information through the program. People are able to whistle blow on debtors that are buying non essential items. What sort of spending is worthy of being reported isn’t clear.
It is unclear what information is shared in the app that allows other citizens to report on the debtors. It has been suggested that this could include name, national id number and photos but I couldn’t find anything official to confirm.Presumably you increase your Good Citizen Score if your report on a debtor’s.
“It’s a part of our measures to enforce our rulings and create a socially credible environment,” - a spokesman of the court.
Surfacing who is a default debtor to government employees is one thing. Making it available to the general public is another.It does create a very strong incentive not to become a defaulted debtor. Perhaps in the longer term it will have a societal change where people rarely take on debt. The purpose of the Good Citizen Score is to prioritise access to limited resources. More than 6,000 people have been due to action relating to their score. Fraud and counterfeiting are a problem in China. The Good Citizen Score is a tool to improve governance and market order.
“Megvii, supports the state’s nationwide surveillance program, which China, with troubling inferences, calls Skynet. Launched in 2005, Skynet aims to create a nationwide panopticon by blanketing the country with CCTV. Thanks to Face++, it now incorporates millions of A.I.-enhanced cameras that have been used to apprehend some 2,000 suspects since 2016” —China is using technology to watch over its citizens. The logic of what is acceptable behaviour is a hard problem for an algorithm. Outsourcing that logic to the citizens is a stop gap measure until technology catches up. As technology improves there will be better data available to the algorithms.
See people’s faces from miles away in the 195 gigapixel photo of Shanghai._As an engineer this is amazing, as a citizen the privacy implications are terrifying._gzht888.com
How much of your privacy are you willing to trade for safety?Seems like a simple question but I find it hard to answer. With the right checks and balances it could be great. Without them dystopian. Time will tell if privacy becomes a privilege. If you would like to get notified when I publish a new article, please join my .