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RSS: #socialcreditsystem

#socialcreditsystem

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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces via RSS ART LIBRE 26/03/2021

    Honest passengers first ! Beijing subway to pilot credit-based fast entry system
    ▻https://www.globaltimes.cn/page/202103/1217953.shtml

    Beijing’s subway is mulling exempting people with good credit records from mandatory security checks as part of its new smart measures to speed up city commuters’ flow of entry into the subway. Beijing subway is expected to pilot the new measure based on passengers’ credit scores, according to a municipal government report on the city’s traffic. With this system, passengers carrying small bags can enter the subway station directly without going through security checks. The Global Times found (...)

    #algorithme #CCTV #biométrie #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #notation #SocialCreditSystem #surveillance (...)

    ##_

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    e-traces @etraces via RSS ART LIBRE 12/01/2021

    China’s social credit system was due by 2020 but is far from ready
    ▻https://algorithmwatch.org/en/story/chinas-social-credit-system-overdue

    Six years after the government announced plans for a national social credit score, Chinese citizens face dozens of systems that are largely incompatible with each other. The central government is planning an overhaul. Research and planning for a national credit score in China started in 1999, according to Lin Junyue, one of the most important minds behind the system. It began as a research project led by the World Economics and Politics Institute of the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences. (...)

    #Alibaba #AntFinancial #algorithme #Sésame #données #SocialCreditSystem #finance #notation #surveillance (...)

    ##AlgorithmWatch

    https://algorithmwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/01/China_Social_Credit_System-01.png

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 4/01/2021

    Inside China’s unexpected quest to protect data privacy
    ▻https://www.technologyreview.com/2020/08/19/1006441/china-data-privacy-hong-yanqing-gdpr

    A new privacy law would look a lot like Europe’s GDPR—but will it restrict state surveillance?

    Late in the summer of 2016, Xu Yuyu received a call that promised to change her life. Her college entrance examination scores, she was told, had won her admission to the English department of the Nanjing University of Posts and Telecommunications. Xu lived in the city of Linyi in Shandong, a coastal province in China, southeast of Beijing. She came from a poor family, singularly reliant on her father’s meager income. But her parents had painstakingly saved for her tuition; very few of her relatives had ever been to college.

    A few days later, Xu received another call telling her she had also been awarded a scholarship. To collect the 2,600 yuan ($370), she needed to first deposit a 9,900 yuan “activation fee” into her university account. Having applied for financial aid only days before, she wired the money to the number the caller gave her. That night, the family rushed to the police to report that they had been defrauded. Xu’s father later said his greatest regret was asking the officer whether they might still get their money back. The answer—“Likely not”—only exacerbated Xu’s devastation. On the way home she suffered a heart attack. She died in a hospital two days later.

    An investigation determined that while the first call had been genuine, the second had come from scammers who’d paid a hacker for Xu’s number, admissions status, and request for financial aid.

    For Chinese consumers all too familiar with having their data stolen, Xu became an emblem. Her death sparked a national outcry for greater data privacy protections. Only months before, the European Union had adopted the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR), an attempt to give European citizens control over how their personal data is used. Meanwhile, Donald Trump was about to win the American presidential election, fueled in part by a campaign that relied extensively on voter data. That data included details on 87 million Facebook accounts, illicitly obtained by the consulting firm Cambridge Analytica. Chinese regulators and legal scholars followed these events closely.

    In the West, it’s widely believed that neither the Chinese government nor Chinese people care about privacy. US tech giants wield this supposed indifference to argue that onerous privacy laws would put them at a competitive disadvantage to Chinese firms. In his 2018 Senate testimony after the Cambridge Analytica scandal, Facebook’s CEO, Mark Zuckerberg, urged regulators not to clamp down too hard on technologies like face recognition. “We still need to make it so that American companies can innovate in those areas,” he said, “or else we’re going to fall behind Chinese competitors and others around the world.”

    In reality, this picture of Chinese attitudes to privacy is out of date. Over the last few years the Chinese government, seeking to strengthen consumers’ trust and participation in the digital economy, has begun to implement privacy protections that in many respects resemble those in America and Europe today.

    Even as the government has strengthened consumer privacy, however, it has ramped up state surveillance. It uses DNA samples and other biometrics, like face and fingerprint recognition, to monitor citizens throughout the country. It has tightened internet censorship and developed a “social credit” system, which punishes behaviors the authorities say weaken social stability. During the pandemic, it deployed a system of “health code” apps to dictate who could travel, based on their risk of carrying the coronavirus. And it has used a slew of invasive surveillance technologies in its harsh repression of Muslim Uighurs in the northwestern region of Xinjiang.

    This paradox has become a defining feature of China’s emerging data privacy regime, says Samm Sacks, a leading China scholar at Yale and New America, a think tank in Washington, DC. It raises a question: Can a system endure with strong protections for consumer privacy, but almost none against government snooping? The answer doesn’t affect only China. Its technology companies have an increasingly global footprint, and regulators around the world are watching its policy decisions.

    November 2000 arguably marks the birth of the modern Chinese surveillance state. That month, the Ministry of Public Security, the government agency that oversees daily law enforcement, announced a new project at a trade show in Beijing. The agency envisioned a centralized national system that would integrate both physical and digital surveillance using the latest technology. It was named Golden Shield.

    Eager to cash in, Western companies including American conglomerate Cisco, Finnish telecom giant Nokia, and Canada’s Nortel Networks worked with the agency on different parts of the project. They helped construct a nationwide database for storing information on all Chinese adults, and developed a sophisticated system for controlling information flow on the internet—what would eventually become the Great Firewall. Much of the equipment involved had in fact already been standardized to make surveillance easier in the US—a consequence of the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act of 1994.

    Despite the standardized equipment, the Golden Shield project was hampered by data silos and turf wars within the Chinese government. Over time, the ministry’s pursuit of a singular, unified system devolved into two separate operations: a surveillance and database system, devoted to gathering and storing information, and the social-credit system, which some 40 government departments participate in. When people repeatedly do things that aren’t allowed—from jaywalking to engaging in business corruption—their social-credit score falls and they can be blocked from things like buying train and plane tickets or applying for a mortgage.

    In the same year the Ministry of Public Security announced Golden Shield, Hong Yanqing entered the ministry’s police university in Beijing. But after seven years of training, having received his bachelor’s and master’s degrees, Hong began to have second thoughts about becoming a policeman. He applied instead to study abroad. By the fall of 2007, he had moved to the Netherlands to begin a PhD in international human rights law, approved and subsidized by the Chinese government.

    Over the next four years, he familiarized himself with the Western practice of law through his PhD research and a series of internships at international organizations. He worked at the International Labor Organization on global workplace discrimination law and the World Health Organization on road safety in China. “It’s a very legalistic culture in the West—that really strikes me. People seem to go to court a lot,” he says. “For example, for human rights law, most of the textbooks are about the significant cases in court resolving human rights issues.”

    Hong found this to be strangely inefficient. He saw going to court as a final resort for patching up the law’s inadequacies, not a principal tool for establishing it in the first place. Legislation crafted more comprehensively and with greater forethought, he believed, would achieve better outcomes than a system patched together through a haphazard accumulation of case law, as in the US.

    After graduating, he carried these ideas back to Beijing in 2012, on the eve of Xi Jinping’s ascent to the presidency. Hong worked at the UN Development Program and then as a journalist for the People’s Daily, the largest newspaper in China, which is owned by the government.

    Xi began to rapidly expand the scope of government censorship. Influential commentators, or “Big Vs”—named for their verified accounts on social media—had grown comfortable criticizing and ridiculing the Chinese Communist Party. In the fall of 2013, the party arrested hundreds of microbloggers for what it described as “malicious rumor-mongering” and paraded a particularly influential one on national television to make an example of him.

    The moment marked the beginning of a new era of censorship. The following year, the Cyberspace Administration of China was founded. The new central agency was responsible for everything involved in internet regulation, including national security, media and speech censorship, and data protection. Hong left the People’s Daily and joined the agency’s department of international affairs. He represented it at the UN and other global bodies and worked on cybersecurity cooperation with other governments.

    By July 2015, the Cyberspace Administration had released a draft of its first law. The Cybersecurity Law, which entered into force in June of 2017, required that companies obtain consent from people to collect their personal information. At the same time, it tightened internet censorship by banning anonymous users—a provision enforced by regular government inspections of data from internet service providers.

    In the spring of 2016, Hong sought to return to academia, but the agency asked him to stay. The Cybersecurity Law had purposely left the regulation of personal data protection vague, but consumer data breaches and theft had reached unbearable levels. A 2016 study by the Internet Society of China found that 84% of those surveyed had suffered some leak of their data, including phone numbers, addresses, and bank account details. This was spurring a growing distrust of digital service providers that required access to personal information, such as ride-hailing, food-delivery, and financial apps. Xu Yuyu’s death poured oil on the flames.

    The government worried that such sentiments would weaken participation in the digital economy, which had become a central part of its strategy for shoring up the country’s slowing economic growth. The advent of GDPR also made the government realize that Chinese tech giants would need to meet global privacy norms in order to expand abroad.

    Hong was put in charge of a new task force that would write a Personal Information Protection Specification (PIPS) to help solve these challenges. The document, though nonbinding, would tell companies how regulators intended to implement the Cybersecurity Law. In the process, the government hoped, it would nudge them to adopt new norms for data protection by themselves.

    Hong’s task force set about translating every relevant document they could find into Chinese. They translated the privacy guidelines put out by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development and by its counterpart, the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation; they translated GDPR and the California Consumer Privacy Act. They even translated the 2012 White House Consumer Privacy Bill of Rights, introduced by the Obama administration but never made into law. All the while, Hong met regularly with European and American data protection regulators and scholars.

    Bit by bit, from the documents and consultations, a general choice emerged. “People were saying, in very simplistic terms, ‘We have a European model and the US model,’” Hong recalls. The two approaches diverged substantially in philosophy and implementation. Which one to follow became the task force’s first debate.

    At the core of the European model is the idea that people have a fundamental right to have their data protected. GDPR places the burden of proof on data collectors, such as companies, to demonstrate why they need the data. By contrast, the US model privileges industry over consumers. Businesses define for themselves what constitutes reasonable data collection; consumers only get to choose whether to use that business. The laws on data protection are also far more piecemeal than in Europe, divvied up among sectoral regulators and specific states.

    At the time, without a central law or single agency in charge of data protection, China’s model more closely resembled the American one. The task force, however, found the European approach compelling. “The European rule structure, the whole system, is more clear,” Hong says.

    But most of the task force members were representatives from Chinese tech giants, like Baidu, Alibaba, and Huawei, and they felt that GDPR was too restrictive. So they adopted its broad strokes—including its limits on data collection and its requirements on data storage and data deletion—and then loosened some of its language. GDPR’s principle of data minimization, for example, maintains that only necessary data should be collected in exchange for a service. PIPS allows room for other data collection relevant to the service provided.

    PIPS took effect in May 2018, the same month that GDPR finally took effect. But as Chinese officials watched the US upheaval over the Facebook and Cambridge Analytica scandal, they realized that a nonbinding agreement would not be enough. The Cybersecurity Law didn’t have a strong mechanism for enforcing data protection. Regulators could only fine violators up to 1,000,000 yuan ($140,000), an inconsequential amount for large companies. Soon after, the National People’s Congress, China’s top legislative body, voted to begin drafting a Personal Information Protection Law within its current five-year legislative period, which ends in 2023. It would strengthen data protection provisions, provide for tougher penalties, and potentially create a new enforcement agency.

    After Cambridge Analytica, says Hong, “the government agency understood, ‘Okay, if you don’t really implement or enforce those privacy rules, then you could have a major scandal, even affecting political things.’”

    The local police investigation of Xu Yuyu’s death eventually identified the scammers who had called her. It had been a gang of seven who’d cheated many other victims out of more than 560,000 yuan using illegally obtained personal information. The court ruled that Xu’s death had been a direct result of the stress of losing her family’s savings. Because of this, and his role in orchestrating tens of thousands of other calls, the ringleader, Chen Wenhui, 22, was sentenced to life in prison. The others received sentences between three and 15 years.Retour ligne automatique
    xu yuyu

    Emboldened, Chinese media and consumers began more openly criticizing privacy violations. In March 2018, internet search giant Baidu’s CEO, Robin Li, sparked social-media outrage after suggesting that Chinese consumers were willing to “exchange privacy for safety, convenience, or efficiency.” “Nonsense,” wrote a social-media user, later quoted by the People’s Daily. “It’s more accurate to say [it is] impossible to defend [our privacy] effectively.”

    In late October 2019, social-media users once again expressed anger after photos began circulating of a school’s students wearing brainwave-monitoring headbands, supposedly to improve their focus and learning. The local educational authority eventually stepped in and told the school to stop using the headbands because they violated students’ privacy. A week later, a Chinese law professor sued a Hangzhou wildlife zoo for replacing its fingerprint-based entry system with face recognition, saying the zoo had failed to obtain his consent for storing his image.

    But the public’s growing sensitivity to infringements of consumer privacy has not led to many limits on state surveillance, nor even much scrutiny of it. As Maya Wang, a researcher at Human Rights Watch, points out, this is in part because most Chinese citizens don’t know the scale or scope of the government’s operations. In China, as in the US and Europe, there are broad public and national security exemptions to data privacy laws. The Cybersecurity Law, for example, allows the government to demand data from private actors to assist in criminal legal investigations. The Ministry of Public Security also accumulates massive amounts of data on individuals directly. As a result, data privacy in industry can be strengthened without significantly limiting the state’s access to information.

    The onset of the pandemic, however, has disturbed this uneasy balance.

    On February 11, Ant Financial, a financial technology giant headquartered in Hangzhou, a city southwest of Shanghai, released an app-building platform called AliPay Health Code. The same day, the Hangzhou government released an app it had built using the platform. The Hangzhou app asked people to self-report their travel and health information, and then gave them a color code of red, yellow, or green. Suddenly Hangzhou’s 10 million residents were all required to show a green code to take the subway, shop for groceries, or enter a mall. Within a week, local governments in over 100 cities had used AliPay Health Code to develop their own apps. Rival tech giant Tencent quickly followed with its own platform for building them.

    The apps made visible a worrying level of state surveillance and sparked a new wave of public debate. In March, Hu Yong, a journalism professor at Beijing University and an influential blogger on Weibo, argued that the government’s pandemic data collection had crossed a line. Not only had it led to instances of information being stolen, he wrote, but it had also opened the door to such data being used beyond its original purpose. “Has history ever shown that once the government has surveillance tools, it will maintain modesty and caution when using them?” he asked.

    Indeed, in late May, leaked documents revealed plans from the Hangzhou government to make a more permanent health-code app that would score citizens on behaviors like exercising, smoking, and sleeping. After a public outcry, city officials canceled the project. That state-run media had also published stories criticizing the app likely helped.

    The debate quickly made its way to the central government. That month, the National People’s Congress announced it intended to fast-track the Personal Information Protection Law. The scale of the data collected during the pandemic had made strong enforcement more urgent, delegates said, and highlighted the need to clarify the scope of the government’s data collection and data deletion procedures during special emergencies. By July, the legislative body had proposed a new “strict approval” process for government authorities to undergo before collecting data from private-sector platforms. The language again remains vague, to be fleshed out later—perhaps through another nonbinding document—but this move “could mark a step toward limiting the broad scope” of existing government exemptions for national security, wrote Sacks and fellow China scholars at New America.

    Hong similarly believes the discrepancy between rules governing industry and government data collection won’t last, and the government will soon begin to limit its own scope. “We cannot simply address one actor while leaving the other out,” he says. “That wouldn’t be a very scientific approach.”

    Other observers disagree. The government could easily make superficial efforts to address public backlash against visible data collection without really touching the core of the Ministry of Public Security’s national operations, says Wang, of Human Rights Watch. She adds that any laws would likely be enforced unevenly: “In Xinjiang, Turkic Muslims have no say whatsoever in how they’re treated.”

    Still, Hong remains an optimist. In July, he started a job teaching law at Beijing University, and he now maintains a blog on cybersecurity and data issues. Monthly, he meets with a budding community of data protection officers in China, who carefully watch how data governance is evolving around the world.

    #criminalité #Nokia_Siemens #fraude #Huawei #payement #Cisco #CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata #Baidu #Alibaba #domination #bénéfices #BHATX #BigData #lutte #publicité (...)

    ##criminalité ##CambridgeAnalytica/Emerdata ##publicité ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##Nortel_Networks ##Facebook ##biométrie ##consommation ##génétique ##consentement ##facial ##reconnaissance ##empreintes ##Islam ##SocialCreditSystem ##surveillance ##TheGreatFirewallofChina ##HumanRightsWatch

    https://wp.technologyreview.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/08/SA_DSC6126-StefenChow_web.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 31/10/2020

    Ant Group, la firme qui a uberisé la Chine, prête à faire sauter la bourse
    ▻https://korii.slate.fr/biz/ant-group-ipo-bourse-record-jack-ma-uberise-chine-alipay-app-banque-assu

    Propriétaire de l’application Alipay, elle devrait lever 29,5 milliards d’euros lors de son arrivée sur les marchés. L’histoire commence en 2004 : Alibaba Group, le géant chinois du e-commerce, crée le système de paiement Alipay pour sa plateforme Taobao, le « eBay chinois » –à l’époque, celle-ci n’accepte que les paiements en liquide. En 2009, Alipay lance son application mobile et commence à utiliser les codes QR. Ant Financial (future Ant Group) lance ensuite Yu’e Bao, qui sera un temps le plus grand (...)

    #Alibaba #Taobao #Alipay #payement #QRcode #domination #bénéfices #finance #AntGroup #notation (...)

    ##SocialCreditSystem

    https://korii.slate.fr/sites/default/files/styles/1440x600/public/000_1gi4u9_0.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 24/09/2020

    A Chinese city withdraws ’civility code’ following online criticism
    ▻https://advox.globalvoices.org/2020/09/14/a-chinese-city-withdraws-civility-code-following-online-criticis

    Despite censorship, criticism of the plan flooded Chinese social media Building upon the successful implementation of its “health code” system in restricting citizens’ movement during COVID-19 pandemic, Suzhou — a Chinese city near Shanghai — attempted to launch a “civility code” in early September to rank citizens’ civility and award or punish them accordingly. But strong reactions from netizens forced authorities to postpone the plan. The health code is a coding system that keeps track of an (...)

    #Alipay #QRcode #smartphone #censure #SocialCreditSystem #COVID-19 #santé #SocialNetwork #surveillance (...)

    ##santé ##GlobalVoices

    https://globalvoices.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/20200907205BRecovered5D-22_XPgRb_1200x0-800x450.png

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 21/09/2020

    Why don’t more people say f**k the algorithm ?
    ▻https://thecorrespondent.com/706/why-dont-more-people-say-f-k-the-algorithm/851046359306-112317b5?pk_campaign=collection-notifier&pk_source=em

    Protest movements around the world have become inherently digital, but why are there so few protests responding to governments’ online actions ? And find out how volunteers are tracking down tourists breaking quarantine in Hawaii. We live in a digital society. But while the internet’s relationship with protest movements has become truly intertwined over the past decade (think Belarus or the Arab Spring), it is still rare to see street protests that have been provoked by digital policy or (...)

    #Facebook #Twitter #algorithme #biométrie #facial #reconnaissance #COVID-19 #délation #discrimination #enseignement #LGBT #pauvreté #santé #SocialCreditSystem #SocialNetwork #CNIL (...)

    ##pauvreté ##santé ##GlobalVoices

    https://useruploads.cdn-thecorrespondent.com/image/Nt7ZMzZxw9siBGCTyMwJfFoFPzM=/1024x576/tc-useruploads-images/ff89988bb60f435e80edf2e27921e05c.png

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 21/09/2020

    Suzhou introduced a new social scoring system, but it was too Orwellian, even for China
    ▻https://algorithmwatch.org/en/story/suzhou-china-social-score

    A city of 10 million in eastern China upgraded its Covid-tracking app to introduce a new “civility” score. It had to backtrack after a public outcry. Suzhou is a city with a population of 10 million, located 100 km west of Shanghai. It is well known for its classic Chinese gardens and, since last week, one of the most Orwellian social scoring experiments to date. The municipal government launched a pilot for a new social behavior scoring system on 3 September 2020, also referred to as the (...)

    #WeChat #Weibo #algorithme #Alipay #AlipayHealthCode #consentement #COVID-19 #notation #santé #SocialCreditSystem #AlgorithmWatch (...)

    ##santé ##surveillance

    https://algorithmwatch.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/49845463732_06798bdf34_k.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 31/08/2020
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    @ericw
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    « Guerre des étoiles » : comment la notation systématique a infusé notre quotidien
    ▻https://www.bfmtv.com/tech/guerre-des-etoiles-comment-la-notation-systematique-a-infuse-notre-quotidien_

    L’évaluation, bien souvent à coup d’étoiles, des produits et services, est devenue une habitude en apparence inoffensive. Dans « La nouvelle guerre des étoiles », deux journalistes de Libération se sont plongés dans les arcanes, dérives et effets pervers de ces nouveaux systèmes de notation. TripAdvisor, Amazon, Uber, Deliveroo, les centres d’appels ont un point commun. Tous proposent à leurs clients d’évaluer, systématiquement, leurs produits ou services, une fois leur prestation concrétisée. Et tous s’en (...)

    #Airbnb #Amazon #booking.com #Deliveroo #TripAdvisor #Uber #SNCF #Alipay #GigEconomy #notation #SocialCreditSystem #surveillance (...)

    ##travail

    https://images.bfmtv.com/WAEogadMZBdkmzUG9QIM0wxp5Hs=/0x158:1904x1229/1904x0/images/La-notation-en-ligne-des-produits-et-services-fait-desormais-office-dhabitude-388575.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 30/08/2020
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    @ericw
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    La nouvelle guerre des étoiles, Vincent COQUAZ, Ismaël HALISSAT
    ▻https://www.editionskero.com/livre/la-nouvelle-guerre-des-etoiles-9782366585148

    Combien de fois avez-vous été sollicités pour attribuer une note ? Pensez à vos derniers achats en ligne, aux étoiles qu’on attribue à un chauffeur ou un livreur... on ne les voit même plus. Cette mode est aussi silencieuse qu’irrésistible : hôpitaux, services publics, tous ont vocation à être comparés, classés. Mais, comme dans le privé, le système porte en germe de graves dérives. Des collèges jésuites du XVIe siècle où elle est née jusqu’aujourd’hui, la notation pose un ensemble de questions auxquelles il (...)

    #Amazon #TripAdvisor #Uber #GigEconomy #notation #SocialCreditSystem #surveillance (...)

    ##travail

    https://www.editionskero.com/sites/default/files/images/livres/couv/9782366585148-001-T.jpeg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 10/08/2020

    L’œil inquisiteur du régime chinois
    ▻https://www.lemonde.fr/series-d-ete/article/2020/08/10/l-il-inquisiteur-du-regime-chinois_6048568_3451060.html

    Enquête« La preuve par l’image » (1/5). Comment des Etats, des particuliers ou des groupes de pression s’appuient sur l’image pour se protéger ou établir une vérité. Dans cet épisode, la Chine, où la vidéo-surveillance massive joue un rôle central dans le contrôle de la population. Ou encore dans la répression de la minorité ouïgoure. L’image pourrait être tirée d’une adaptation high-tech de 1984, la dystopie d’Orwell : de simples badauds, traversant un passage piéton, identifiés automatiquement par les (...)

    #Alibaba #Huawei #Tencent #algorithme #CCTV #QRcode #smartphone #SIM #biométrie #criminalité #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #BigData #discrimination #immatriculation #Islam #SocialCreditSystem #SocialNetwork #surveillance (...)

    ##criminalité ##_

    https://img.lemde.fr/2020/07/28/185/0/591/295/1440/720/60/0/76ef5df_3687966-oui.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 27/06/2020
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    @ericw
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    Facial Recognition Is The New Polygraph Test For Insurers
    ▻https://sociable.co/technology/facial-recognition-is-the-new-polygraph-test-for-insurers

    Insurance companies in Asia are beginning to use facial recognition to record client interviews, so they can spot when customers are lying. Beyond the obvious positive consequence of a reduction in fraud, who will actually benefit and is there potential for over-reach ? Chinese insurer, Ping An Insurance, is increasingly using facial recognition technology to record the faces of customers and their own staff in order to verify their identities. Furthermore, the technology is being used (...)

    #Amazon #AmazonWebServices-AWS #algorithme #CCTV #Rekognition #émotions #facial #fraude #reconnaissance #finance #vidéo-surveillance #SocialCreditSystem (...)

    ##surveillance

    https://sociable.co/wp-content/uploads/2019/06/facial-recognition-system.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 20/06/2020

    China’s Health Codes Increase Population Surveillance
    ▻https://bitterwinter.org/chinas-health-codes-increase-population-surveillance

    The CCP regime enforced mobile apps to prevent the spread of COVID-19, which will likely outlive the pandemic and will be used to expand automated social control. China’s health code services, run on Alipay, an online payment platform owned by the Chinese e-commerce giant Alibaba, or the ubiquitous multi-purpose WeChat app, assign one of the three color codes to people. Red means that a person is at a high risk of spreading the coronavirus and should quarantine for 14 days, yellow—for seven (...)

    #Alibaba #Alipay #QRcode #AlipayHealthCode #smartphone #WeChat #religion #BigData #COVID-19 #santé #SocialCreditSystem (...)

    ##santé ##surveillance

    https://bitterwinter.org/wp-content/uploads/2020/06/People-showing-their-health-codes.jpg

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    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 28/05/2020
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    @jurisquetout
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    CovidApp : extension du domaine du tracking de santé
    ▻https://www.nextinpact.com/brief/covidapp---extension-du-domaine-du-tracking-de-sante-12529.htm

    La ville de Hangzhou, 10 millions d’habitants, va intégrer davantage d’indicateurs et généraliser l’application initialement lancée pour lutter contre le coronavirus, rapporte The Guardian. La commission de la santé de la ville a déclaré que le système proposé serait un « pare-feu pour améliorer la santé et l’immunité des personnes » après la pandémie. Dans l’application proposée, le statut d’un individu serait codé par couleur et noté sur 100 sur la base des dossiers médicaux, des résultats des tests (...)

    #algorithme #QRcode #smartphone #technologisme #COVID-19 #notation #profiling #santé #SocialCreditSystem #surveillance #métadonnées (...)

    ##santé ##BigData

    https://cdn2.nextinpact.com/compress/407-197/images/bd/wide-linked-media/25282.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 14/04/2020

    La technologie au service du contrôle social en Chine - Vidéo - Play RTS
    ▻https://www.rts.ch/play/tv/geopolitis/video/la-technologie-au-service-du-controle-social-en-chine?id=11135557&startTime=1.84

    #notation # #SocialCreditSystem #journalisme #surveillance #vidéo-surveillance #reconnaissance #facial #domination #biométrie #CCTV #algorithme #Apple #Microsoft

    ##notation ##_
    ▻https://www.rts.ch/2020/03/02/21/13/11135556.image/16x9/scale/width/640

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 29/03/2020

    What are the Different Credit Score Ranges ? - Experian
    ▻https://www.experian.com/blogs/ask-experian/infographic-what-are-the-different-scoring-ranges

    To interpret your credit score, and what it tells you about your borrowing power, you need to understand where the score falls along the score range between the lowest and highest numbers generated by its scoring system. All credit scores have the same basic goal : helping lenders (and other potential creditors, such as landlords and utility companies) understand how risky it may be to do business with you. High credit scores indicate a relatively low likelihood of default and relatively (...)

    #Experian #consommation #SocialCreditSystem

    https://www.experian.com/blogs/ask-experian/wp-content/uploads/woman-reviewing-scoring-ranges-on-tablet.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 29/03/2020
    2
    @simplicissimus
    @sinehebdo
    2

    Special Report : How ZTE helps Venezuela create China-style social control - Reuters
    ▻https://www.reuters.com/article/us-venezuela-zte-specialreport-idUSKCN1NJ1TT

    Caracas (Reuters) - In April 2008, former Venezuelan President Hugo Chavez dispatched Justice Ministry officials to visit counterparts in the Chinese technology hub of Shenzhen. Their mission, according to a member of the Venezuela delegation, was to learn the workings of China’s national identity card program. Chavez, a decade into his self-styled socialist revolution, wanted help to provide ID credentials to the millions of Venezuelans who still lacked basic documentation needed for tasks (...)

    #ZTE #carte #CCTV #passeport #consommation #BigData #notation #santé #SocialCreditSystem (...)

    ##santé ##surveillance
    ►https://s3.reutersmedia.net/resources/r

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
    • @sinehebdo
      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo 30/03/2020

      #coronavirus #fascistovirus #Venezuela

      Voir compile des effets délétères indirects de la pandémie :
      ►https://seenthis.net/messages/832147

      Dror@sinehebdo @sinehebdo
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 27/03/2020
    5
    @simplicissimus
    @kassem
    @colporteur
    @mad_meg
    @ericw
    5

    Antonio Casilli : « Cette épidémie s’avère aussi un signal d’alarme à propos du numérique » | AOC media - Analyse Opinion Critique
    ▻https://aoc.media/entretien/2020/03/27/antonio-casilli-cette-epidemie-savere-aussi-un-signal-dalarme-a-propos-du-num

    Près de 3 milliards de personnes sont aujourd’hui confinées. Dans cette situation, qu’il s’agisse du travail ou de toute autre forme d’interactions humaines, les relations numériques sont venues pallier l’absence de contact physique. Comme si nous avions été brutalement précipités dans un monde 2.0 depuis longtemps prophétisé. Reste à savoir si ce monde relève plutôt de l’utopie, ou de la dystopie. Depuis le début de l’épidémie de Covid-19, devenue depuis pandémie, l’outil numérique est apparu tour à tour (...)

    #Google #Microsoft #Amazon #Deliveroo #Facebook #Uber #WhatsApp #algorithme #smartphone #biométrie #géolocalisation #température (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##facial ##législation ##métadonnées ##reconnaissance ##BigData ##CCPA ##CloudComputing ##GAFAM ##GigEconomy ##santé ##SocialCreditSystem ##surveillance ##travail

    https://aoc.media/wp-content/uploads/2020/03/capture-d-e-cran-2020-03-27-a-16-34-45.png

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
    • @simplicissimus
      Simplicissimus @simplicissimus 28/03/2020

      À mon sens, le grand succès de la Chine dans ce contexte de pandémie ce ne sera pas les exploits médicaux, la preuve de sa capacité pharmaceutique, ni même l’aide internationale qu’elle assure déjà auprès de certains pays comme l’Italie, mais l’export d’un modèle idéologique. C’est le pire du Parti communiste chinois qui triomphe : l’alliance des outils déjà mis en place comme le système de crédit social, la surveillance généralisée par la reconnaissance faciale, les applications de contrôle des mouvements de population dans un contexte de pandémie.
      […]
      Il suffit de voir les lois qui ont été acceptées en Israël il y a quelques semaines pour constater ce qui commence à se généraliser en termes de surveillance de masse, en termes de violations systématiques de la vie privée des citoyens. Il faut aussi noter, encore une fois, qu’il existe d’autres modèles comme la Corée du Sud qui ont plus joué sur une actualisation de pratiques et de codes sociaux préexistants et un dépistage systématique, avec un beau succès. Une alternative est donc possible.

      Simplicissimus @simplicissimus
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 5/03/2020

    China is getting smarter - but at what cost ? - BBC News
    ▻https://www.bbc.com/news/technology-50658538

    Thirty years ago, Shenzhen was a fishing village, surrounded by paddy fields. Then came a plan to build China’s first special economic zone to allow foreign investments, and out of the quiet rural landscape grew private businesses and factories which over time transformed into a city. Now Shenzhen, with a population of 12 million, is just one part of a huge urbanised area running down the Pearl River Delta. China’s smart cities ambitions are among the grandest in the world. But there are (...)

    #Alibaba #Huawei #Tencent #algorithme #SmartCity #CCTV #géolocalisation #automobile #vidéo-surveillance #notation #SocialCreditSystem #surveillance (...)

    ##urbanisme

    https://ichef.bbci.co.uk/news/1024/branded_news/12D2F/production/_110030177_shenzhen1.gif

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 28/01/2020

    Le nouveau visage de la surveillance de masse technologique
    ▻https://www.ladn.eu/tech-a-suivre/nouveau-visage-surveillance-masse-technologique

    « À l’heure où la reconnaissance faciale investit nos visages, où les assistants vocaux intelligents s’invitent dans nos salons, et où Instagram recompose nos rapports sociaux, est-il encore possible de se tenir à l’abri des regards ? » C’est la question qu’Olivier Tesquet nous invite à poser dans À la trace. Interview. Journaliste chez Télérama, Olivier Tesquet décrypte depuis dix ans (Comprendre WikiLeaks, Dans la tête de Julian Assange) la façon dont l’omniprésence de la surveillance recompose à sa (...)

    #DGSI #Google #CambridgeAnalytica #Palantir #Ring #Facebook #Instagram #TripAdvisor #Uber #Yelp #algorithme #CCTV #domotique #biométrie #consentement #facial #reconnaissance #data #DataBrokers #datamining #enseignement #BigData #InternetOfThings (...)

    ##SocialCreditSystem ##SocialNetwork ##travailleurs ##_

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 27/01/2020
    10
    @simplicissimus
    @rastapopoulos
    @fadixu
    @kassem
    @cy_altern
    @7h36
    @supergeante
    @fredlm
    @ze_dach
    @lieuxcommuns
    10

    « Nous sommes les agents consentants de notre propre surveillance technologique » - entretien avec Olivier Tesquet, auteur de « A la trace » - NEON
    ▻https://www.neonmag.fr/nous-sommes-les-agents-consentants-de-notre-propre-surveillance-technologiqu

    Tous fliqués ? Le journaliste Olivier Tesquet fait le point dans son livre A la trace sur la sournoise généralisation de la surveillance dans nos vies. Interview. Vous avez sans doute, comme moi, un rapport d’amour-haine vis-à-vis de votre téléphone. Vous le reposez, le reprenez, fermez rageusement Instagram avant de rouvrir machinalement l’appli. Autant vous prévenir, la lecture d’A la trace d’Olivier Tesquet, 32 ans, journaliste à Télérama, ne va pas arranger cette relation ambigüe. Dans cet (...)

    #CambridgeAnalytica #Google #Huawei #ICE #Ring #Amazon #Instagram #algorithme #CCTV #biométrie #migration #consentement #vidéo-surveillance #BigData #data #santé #SocialCreditSystem #SocialNetwork #surveillance #travailleurs (...)

    ##santé ##_

    https://www.neonmag.fr/content/uploads/2020/01/a-la-trace-surveillance-1024x576.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
    • @fil
      Fil @fil 27/01/2020

      je l’ai entendu sur France Culture hier — il parlait tellement vite que ça donnait mal à la tête. À part ça il a l’air bien informé :)

      Fil @fil
    • @cy_altern
      cy_altern @cy_altern CC BY-SA 28/01/2020

      Interview sur France Culture : ►https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/linvite-innovation/culture-numerique-chronique-du-dimanche-26-janvier-2020

      #olivier_tesquet #reconnaissance_faciale #capitalisme_de_surveillance #j’ai_rien_à_cacher

      cy_altern @cy_altern CC BY-SA
    • @cdb_77
      CDB_77 @cdb_77 28/01/2020

      À la trace. Enquête sur les nouveaux territoires de la surveillance

      « À l’heure où la #reconnaissance_faciale investit nos visages, où les assistants vocaux intelligents s’invitent dans nos salons, où Instagram recompose nos rapports sociaux, est-il encore possible de se tenir à l’abri des regards ? Des caméras intelligentes du Xinjiang à nos profils Facebook, les dispositifs de surveillance s’éparpillent jusqu’à donner l’illusion de disparaître. Parce qu’ils sont partout, nous ne les voyons plus nulle part. En agents consentants de notre propre enfermement, nous sommes invités à transformer chacune de nos expériences en signal que ces dispositifs pourront exploiter. Depuis dix ans, j’essaie de cartographier minutieusement les nouveaux #territoires_de_la_surveillance, que j’observe tout en y résidant. En décrivant sans les fantasmer les mécanismes de ces systèmes opaques, ce livre est un manuel à l’usage de ceux, trop nombreux, qui pensent n’avoir rien à cacher. »

      ►http://www.premierparallele.fr/livre/a-la-trace
      #livre #invisibilité

      déjà signalé ici :
      ▻https://seenthis.net/messages/820043

      CDB_77 @cdb_77
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 24/01/2020

    China’s Social Credit System : A Chimera with Real Claws | IFRI - Institut français des relations internationales
    ▻https://www.ifri.org/en/publications/notes-de-lifri/asie-visions/chinas-social-credit-system-chimera-real-claws

    China’s Social Credit System remains a poorly understood combination of rating schemes and blacklists, but the consequences for individuals and businesses are very real. Since the State Council published a “Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System (2014-2020)”, all administrations and localities in China have been busy figuring out ways to develop social credit systems relevant to their own jurisdiction, while a few corporations have also been experimenting with private (...)

    #algorithme #discrimination #SocialCreditSystem #surveillance #

    ##_

    https://www.ifri.org/sites/default/files/styles/vignette_share/public/thumbnails/image/shutterstock_410756617.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 23/01/2020

    Reconnaissance faciale : « Il existe encore en France des garde-fous en matière de données biométriques »
    ▻https://www.lemonde.fr/idees/article/2020/01/22/il-existe-encore-en-france-des-garde-fous-en-matiere-de-donnees-biometriques

    Si la loi française garantit la liberté des personnes « contre une reconnaissance faciale encore trop peu performante », il faut questionner les usages futurs de cet outil, notamment en termes de surveillance sécuritaire, souligne, dans une tribune au « Monde », la consultante en communication Claire Gerardin. Depuis plus d’un siècle se pose la question de savoir jusqu’où l’objectif de garantir la sécurité des personnes n’empiète pas, ou pas trop, sur leur liberté, et sur leur vie privée. La technologie (...)

    #algorithme #Alicem #CCTV #biométrie #[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données_(RGPD)[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR)[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation_(GDPR) #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #data #surveillance #SocialCreditSystem # (...)

    ##[fr]Règlement_Général_sur_la_Protection_des_Données__RGPD_[en]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_[nl]General_Data_Protection_Regulation__GDPR_ ##_ ##CNIL ##LaQuadratureduNet

    https://img.lemde.fr/2020/01/17/197/0/5575/2787/1440/720/60/0/d8665a6_XPam52nHmNaV2vauIvrAswXa.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 9/01/2020
    3
    @najort
    @pierre5
    @erratic
    3

    Vie privée sur internet : du renoncement à la désobéissance ?
    ▻https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/la-grande-table-idees/vie-privee-sur-internet-du-renoncement-a-la-desobeissance

    Avec Bernard E. Harcourt, Professeur de droit à Columbia University, pour « La Société d’exposition » (Seuil, janvier 2020). Notre autre numérique est comme un hologramme de nous même constitué part toutes les traces que nous avons laissés et qui crée un double qui est plus fiable que notre soi analogique. Nous pensons, imaginons ce que nous somme. Notre moi numérique est composé de toutes les choses que nous avons regardé, que nous avons lues. (Bernard Harcourt) Toute la nouvelle logique qui (...)

    #algorithme #smartphone #GPS #géolocalisation #prédiction #NSA #addiction #BigData #datamining #data #marketing #profiling #SocialCreditSystem #SocialNetwork #surveillance #Google #Facebook #Instagram #Twitter #CambridgeAnalytica #manipulation #élections (...)

    ##biométrie ##facial ##reconnaissance

    https://cdn.radiofrance.fr/s3/cruiser-production/2020/01/ad14a6ce-90f7-449e-b999-8bffd2da5eac/838_gettyimages-1079012962.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 7/01/2020

    La Chine, leader inquiétant de la smart city
    ▻https://korii.slate.fr/tech/chine-villes-smart-city-shenzhen-surveillance-reconnaissance-faciale-cre

    Quand « intelligence » rime avec « surveillance ». Entre 1980 et aujourd’hui, la part de la population chinoise résidant en ville est passée de 18% à 58%. Ce chiffre devrait encore s’accroître de 292 millions de personnes d’ici à 2050. La Chine compte 662 villes, dont 160 dépassent le million d’habitant·es. Les ambitions de Pékin en matière de smart city sont considérables : le régime prévoit la construction de dix-neuf nouveaux pôles urbains et d’une « super-ville » de quarante millions d’habitant·es. Du (...)

    #Alibaba #algorithme #CCTV #SmartCity #biométrie #automobilistes #facial #reconnaissance #vidéo-surveillance #Islam #santé #SocialCreditSystem (...)

    ##santé ##surveillance

    https://korii.slate.fr/sites/default/files/styles/1440x600/public/000_1gb5eg.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
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  • @etraces
    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE 6/01/2020
    5
    @reka
    @loutre
    @tintin
    @die_brucke
    @vanderling
    5

    Miguel Benasayag : « Penser un monde géré par une raison calculante est la pire des folies »
    ▻https://www.franceculture.fr/emissions/le-reveil-culturel/miguel-benasayag-quand-les-big-data-decident-des-orientations-du-monde

    Rencontre avec le philosophe, psychanalyste, qui fait paraître « La tyrannie des algorithmes », aux éditions Textuel Tewfik Hakem s’entretient avec Miguel Benasayag, psychanalyste, essayiste, chercheur en épistémologie, auteur de La tyrannie des algorithmes, paru aux éditions Textuel. "(...) C’est au quotidien que la vie collective est insidieusement « prise en charge » par les machines : logiciels de surveillance couplés à des caméras, justice prédictive, suivi marketing de nos moindres faits et (...)

    #algorithme #robotique #CCTV #GPS #technologisme #justice #prédiction #vidéo-surveillance #BigData #marketing #profiling #surveillance (...)

    ##SocialCreditSystem

    https://cdn.radiofrance.fr/s3/cruiser-production/2019/12/d91d0bce-92e1-45c2-bb23-1636acfdf45d/838_img_1672.jpg

    e-traces @etraces ART LIBRE
    • @antonin1
      Antonin @antonin1 CC BY-NC-SA 6/01/2020

      #technocritique #audio #gouvernance

      Antonin @antonin1 CC BY-NC-SA
    • @rastapopoulos
      RastaPopoulos @rastapopoulos CC BY-NC 6/01/2020

      #critique_techno :)

      RastaPopoulos @rastapopoulos CC BY-NC
    • @antonin1
      Antonin @antonin1 CC BY-NC-SA 8/01/2020

      J’aime bien le « On ne va pas refaire le match entre technophiles et technophobes. » Ben non, on ne va pas admettre que ceux que vous appeliez les « technophobes » ont fourni des analyses plus intéressantes que les « technophiles ».

      Antonin @antonin1 CC BY-NC-SA
    • @rastapopoulos
      RastaPopoulos @rastapopoulos CC BY-NC 10/01/2020

      Et toujours, comme depuis des siècles, on en est toujours là « mais c’est comment on les utilise qui est important »

      RastaPopoulos @rastapopoulos CC BY-NC
    • @antonin1
      Antonin @antonin1 CC BY-NC-SA 10/01/2020

      J’ai écouté d’une oreille trop distraite mais je l’ai trouvé un peu mou, le Miguel. Occupé à ne pas apparaître comme trop radical, acceptant le désastre en cours parce qu’il est là, sans aucune perspective de résistance que l’entretien de son petit cerveau comme une réserve de biodiversité, bof. Et pourtant...

      Antonin @antonin1 CC BY-NC-SA
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Thèmes liés

  • #socialcreditsystem
  • #surveillance
  • #algorithme
  • #cctv
  • #vidéo-surveillance
  • #biométrie
  • #facial
  • #bigdata
  • #santé
  • #reconnaissance
  • #alibaba
  • #smartphone
  • #contrôle
  • #notation
  • country: chine
  • #socialnetwork
  • #profiling
  • #amazon
  • #voyageurs
  • #facebook
  • #_
  • #google
  • #wechat
  • #tencent
  • country: china
  • #géolocalisation
  • #covid-19
  • #alipay
  • #baidu
  • #qrcode
  • #islam
  • #web
  • #data
  • #huawei
  • #consentement
  • #microsoft
  • #uber
  • #travail
  • #apple
  • #gigeconomy