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Sunday, December 2, 2018

China's Orwellian Social Credit Score Will Monitor All Beijing Citizens In 2020

China's Orwellian Social Credit Score Will Monitor All Beijing Citizens In 2020

Profile picture for user Tyler Durden

The "Beijing Further Optimization of the Business Environment Action Plan (2018-2020)" has just been distributed to all district committees, district governments, municipal party committees, local government ministries and commissions bureaus, various head offices, multiple people's organizations, colleges, and universities.
The new report details Beijing's ambitious plan to control each of its 22 million citizens based on a system of social scoring that punishes behavior it does not approve, with the full implementation of the program to be rolled out by 2020. 
For some time, we have monitored China's social credit initiative, but this new report marks one of the first times a specific timeframe of its full implementation has been released to the general public.
People with great social credit will get “green channel” benefits while those who violate laws will be punished with restrictions and penalties.
Some critics warn the new system is fraught with risks and could reduce humans to little more than a report card, said Bloomberg
Hangzhou, the capital city of China’s Zhejiang province, rolled out its social credit system earlier this year, rewarding “pro-social behaviors” such as blood donations, healthy lifestyles, and volunteer work while punishing those who violate traffic laws, smoke and drink, and speak poorly about government. 
By mid-Q2, China had blocked more than 11 million flights and 4 million high-speed train trips for people who had poor social credit scores, according to the National Development and Reform Commission.
According to the Beijing plan, different agencies will link databases to get a more detailed picture of every resident’s interactions across many financial and social platforms. 
Bloomberg said the proposal calls for agencies including tourism bodies, business regulators and transit authorities to work together.
Tracking of individual behavior in China has become more accessible to the government with apps such as Tencent’s WeChat and Ant Financial’s Alipay, a central point for making payments, obtaining loans and organizing transport. These accounts are linked to mobile phone numbers, which in turn require government IDs.
Other technologies, including social media, facial recognition, smartphones, artificial intelligence, and smart cameras, will play a critical roll in this Orwellian social manipulation strategy. 
In the next few years, every action of a citizen will leave a permanent digital fingerprint that the government will either assign a good or bad score based on how they view the action. 
This type of social control has never been done before.
The final version of China’s national social credit system remains uncertain, but it now seems that a timeframe of full implementation is well understood
Watch the episode of Black Mirror called Nosedive, it pretty much explains that the social credit system is already here. 

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