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China Social Networks

Beijing To Judge Every Resident Based on Behavior by End of 2020 (bloomberg.com) 344

China's plan to judge each of its 1.3 billion people based on their social behavior is moving a step closer to reality, with Beijing set to adopt a lifelong points program by 2021 that assigns personalized ratings for each resident. From a report: The capital city will pool data from several departments to reward and punish some 22 million citizens based on their actions and reputations by the end of 2020, according to a plan posted on the Beijing municipal government's website this week. Those with better so-called social credit will get "green channel" benefits while those who violate laws will find life more difficult. The Beijing project will improve blacklist systems so that those deemed untrustworthy will be "unable to move even a single step," according to the government's plan. Xinhua reported on the proposal Tuesday, while the report posted on the municipal government's website is dated July 18.
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Beijing To Judge Every Resident Based on Behavior by End of 2020

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  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23, 2018 @12:38AM (#57686824)

    BM did an episode on this.

    Sounds like a great fucking system.

    Remind me why we're doing business with these people again?

    • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

      by Kaenneth ( 82978 )

      Only difference is in the US private companies keep scores on you instead of the government.

      • by swillden ( 191260 ) <shawn-ds@willden.org> on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:28AM (#57686948) Journal

        Only difference is in the US private companies keep scores on you instead of the government.

        Well, the other difference is that the only credit score they track is about, well, credit -- your ability to borrow money and otherwise incur future debts. And it's not some judgment on your overall fitness for society, it's just a judgment on how likely you are to pay what you owe.

        This "other difference" is enormous. So big that they aren't remotely the same things at all.

        The closest thing the US has to this social credit score is a criminal record. If you are convicted of a crime, especially a felony, then the government keeps track of that, and it will affect your ability to get a job, own a job, vote (in most states), etc. And if your crime was sexual in nature, it will affect where you're allowed to live and work as well. What makes this particularly nasty is that prosecutors are really good at extracting confessions and pleas of guilt even from innocent people.

        • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward

          That's not really true unfortunately.

          Cambridge Analytica was a relatively small databroker which focussed on deriving psychological profiles from your data through 'inference'. Larger databrokers have 8000 scores for sale. All of them feed your mundane data (social media scraped, smart home data, etc) to algorithms that then compare your data to that of other people they know more about, and if your data exhibits similar traits they will infer that you also fit in certain categories.

          This talk explains thing

        • The closest thing the US has to this social credit score is a criminal record.

          It goes way beyond that, the US government can simply get what it wants because it is already in bed with big business. Business is already screening you out of many things behind "employment screening services". Many of these companies also have other names you wouldn't recognize, if you don't think you're already being watched all the time by companies who's sole purpose is to profit and minimize risk, I got a bridge I want to sell ya.

          http://www.es2.com/ [es2.com]

          Check out "instant checkmate", to lookup info on p

          • No fly lists (Score:3, Insightful)

            by aberglas ( 991072 )

            Has similarity. A serious penalty, ex judicial, no right of appeal.

            Only in the USA. No other democracy. It is very strange that the USA has the best constitution concerning rights and the worst record of actually providing them.

            That said, it is still nothing like what China is proposing. And has already imposed on the Uyghurs. China is becoming very grim. Nobody there will dare to criticize the government on anything.

            If Emperor Xi goes bad, he cannot be stopped domestically. And he can drag the who

        • by jbmartin6 ( 1232050 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @10:15AM (#57688110)
          You are right that it is no where near the scale of what China is implementing, but credit scores get used for a good number of non-credit decisions such as getting a job.
        • by sremick ( 91371 )

          Well, the other difference is that the only credit score they track is about, well, credit -- your ability to borrow money and otherwise incur future debts. And it's not some judgment on your overall fitness for society, it's just a judgment on how likely you are to pay what you owe.

          Except that that's increasingly not true. We're now seeing one's credit score being used as criteria for determining what auto insurance rate you get, your ability to get housing, and (ironically) as part of the application review process when you try to get a job.

          The negative feedback loop that that last one causes is particularly bad.

      • Only difference is in the US private companies keep scores on you instead of the government.

        Well in China it is US companies, ex Google, helping to keep track of people on behalf of the Chinese government. Its only the US government that Google/Amazon/etc employees refuse to work for.

        • Same as in pre WWII Germany, where Ford sold trucks and IBM Holerite machines.

    • by PopeRatzo ( 965947 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:14AM (#57686920) Journal

      Remind me why we're doing business with these people again?

      Are you joking? We do business in places where they abduct American residents, torture them, chop them up into pieces and dissolve them in acid.

      Because there's money to be made.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23, 2018 @02:44AM (#57687102)

      Don't worry, you will soon have this system too. Cars have mandatory GPS, so they will first start at car insurance based on your GPS recorded driving habits. Then they will combine it with traffic control to see if you are speeding/driving on red. Then it will naturally evolve to everyone having the chip (which has been discussed lately a lot) and that will evolve into everyone being tracked throughout the city instead of just your work or your home. And so on and so on.

      And you will be rated based on all of those things and your social media use etc.

      I wish i was kidding, but i'm not.

      • Mandatory GPS (Score:5, Informative)

        by aberglas ( 991072 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @06:39AM (#57687598)

        They do not need mandatory GPS in cars. They already have number plate readers everywhere. Plus they can track your phone.

      • by Kiuas ( 1084567 )

        Don't worry, you will soon have this system too.

        I mean, thing with all large western states is, we don't really now if these kind of systems exist or not. Social media and credit information and so on is all out there, and there be large agencies with significant technical capabilities that we know are capable of tracking mobile phones' location and bank transfers etc. They operate gigantic data centers and apparently (if the Snowden leaks are to be believed) intercept data from ISPs and so on. Hell, Google

    • by jools33 ( 252092 )

      Well singles day in China had about 3 to 4 times the estimated sales that Black Friday / Cyber Monday had last year, and that trend looks set to continue this year. Being able to sell competitively to the largest market in the world may in fact be a good thing for the US economy.

  • by astrofurter ( 5464356 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @12:46AM (#57686846)

    "A state where uniformity of purpose has been established for one year, will be strong for ten years; where uniformity of purpose has been established for ten years, it will be strong for a hundred years, where uniformity of purpose has been established for a hundred years, it will be strong for a thousand years; and a state which has been strong for a thousand years will attain supremacy."

    https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wik... [wikipedia.org]

    • by Shazatoga ( 614011 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:07AM (#57686904)
      Great and all until a black swan arrives and invalidates the current structure. Democracies (inc. Republics), for all their flaws, can face a black swan or two as they are designed to handle change. They aren't perfect (Rome's refusal to embrace change and to enfranchise the Italians led to the populist dictatorship of the Caesars), but tend to be more anti-fragile than the alternatives.
    • It will fail because of corruption.
      They already have more than enough corruption to taint it now, this will only compound it.
      Then there are the errors that will always creep in.
      It's a guaranteed self destructing system, the only question being how long can they keep it looking like it's working correctly, or at least good enough.
    • That must have been the guy who wrote the speeches for Hitler.

    • He never heard of the Roman Empire it seems
  • by Shazatoga ( 614011 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @12:47AM (#57686854)
    Good thing bureaucrats are incorruptible and would never abuse the system for a bribe or petty revenge. /s This will be one of the greatest hacking targets in the world. Not to mention that putting the wellbeing of 1.4 billion people into a database means that even a small error in an edge case in the code can screw millions of people.
    • by rtb61 ( 674572 )

      Which is exactly why failure in inevitable but for those in power, the delusion of control is insatiably desirable. The system will be gamed and hacked and of course abused, if you do not run a real/fake profile a social look good construct, you would be very foolish but even then, corruption will make that meaningless, just swap out profile details. The easiest bit of corruption one, edit and your crap profile becomes someone else's and theirs becomes yours, that is simply inevitable.

      From an external view

  • Soon one will have to wear a cap with electrodes and a receiver backpack transmitting the signals to the cap so all will be controllable. Anyone seen not wearing this equipment will be shot.

    Must be very fearful and control character people thinking out this BS and not taking into account what the rebels will heck out to circumvent everything.....
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      Or more sinisterly, everyone has an implant with a nerve agent. Wrong thought? Someone is the Communist Party pushes the button and you are no more. However, they'll be nice about it and be sure to push the button while the incorrectly thinking human is near a crematorium...saves on gas.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23, 2018 @12:57AM (#57686880)

    Creating an entire subset of your society that is so locked out of daily life that they can't even function is a very, very quick way to incite organized resistance - not just out of ideological opposition, but from pure survival necessity. Blacklisted people will band together with blacklisted people to set up a parallel society so they can simply function day to day. Food? Housing? Transportation? You can't freeze out even 5% of the population from that and keep it contained.

    If they were just making life difficult, that would be one thing, but it sounds like the Chicoms have gone so overboard that they won't be able to even eat or sleep under a roof. Watch it blow up.

    • by Anonymous Coward on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:03AM (#57686894)

      America does that with felony convictions in the United States, and no one cares because convicted felons "did something bad"...well, people who get blacklisted in China will be considered to have done something bad by Chinese standards. Nothing will happen except create a nice pool of easily exploitable people.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Opportunist ( 166417 )

        And see what it has done for the US. In some towns there are areas where even the police doesn't dare to go anymore, this is the very definition of a parallel society with its own rules, its own policies and its own social system.

        • No, we don't have towns where the police don't dare to go. We have towns where the police don't care to go.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Which prompts the next question: if you have a bad social credit score how easy is it to repair it?

        Is it like social media where you can buy likes to boost your score?

    • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @02:22AM (#57687064)

      Blacklisted people will band together with blacklisted people to set up a parallel society

      Yep! And then they will either be sent to re-education camps, or "disappeared".

      China in fact would find it very HANDY for such people to band together, it would save them a lot of time.

      If you want a 100% effective Panopticon, I can think of no better state on Earth that can make that happen by sweeping the undesirables under the rug.

      So what everyone has to decide in the end is, do they want a model like that or a model like America? I'm not really sure there are any other workable models left.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • by dryeo ( 100693 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @12:10PM (#57688558)

        America, with its no-fly list, its sex offender list where taking a pee or a selfie can fuck your life, your criminal thing where being arrested and released is enough to fuck you, your employment laws that allow you to be fired for posting the wrong thing somewhere? The right to own a gun with how many exceptions?
        Not to mention the political system that gives a choice of Coke or Pepsi and everyone is judged by their political affiliation.
        As someone posted up the page, great rights written into your Constitution, shitty in practice.
        For someone like you, with a good social credit standing, your country seems great, wait till you get wrongly arrested, especially if you can't afford a lawyer.

    • They aren't freezing people out of food, housing, transportation but instead "luxury items" like airplane travel, high speed rail tickets, rent in premium neighborhoods, etc.

      They haven't said there is no plan for these people. I'm predicting axlotl tanks.

      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Now they are only planning the freeze them out of luxury item. Bureaucratic creep knows no bounds, and the Chinese Communist Party doesn't either.

    • Creating an entire subset of your society that is so locked out of daily life that they can't even function is a very, very quick way to incite organized resistance...

      Yeah, it's like someone said, "Let's see how long it takes to create a hidden underclass of those who've failed out or dropped out of the system".

      First thought I had when reading this story.

    • of how to create an underclass in a country that is increasingly homogeneous.

      See, in order for a ruling class to keep a working class in line they need to divide the working class. In America we do this along racial lines (Black/White/Latino). India uses a caste system. Japan got creative and declared some professions "unclean" and forced families into them, then kept lists of those families.

      The goal here is to get you "kicking down". e.g. to direct your rage at the poor lot in life you got at a gro
  • by piojo ( 995934 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:00AM (#57686886)

    Obviously this is like a dystopian dream and will stifle the feeling of freedom. But we should keep in mind Beijing (and China in general) has some a lot of the sort of petty problems which more rarely happen in the west: Rampant littering. People encourage their children to urinate in the street. Scammers take advantage of tourists, brazenly acting in public places in broad daylight. Taxi drivers lie about the fare, or refuse to use the meter so they can set whatever rate they choose, depending on the passenger's skin color and accent. People get to the front of a queue not by waiting, but by walking to the front of the queue.

    The questions that come to mind are whether it will work, whether this is temporary (until the above cultural problems are solved), and whether it's worth the loss in feeling of freedom.

    • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:16AM (#57686926)
      Know how we solved it? Mostly cops giving out tickets. The scammers got arrested. Same results, maybe better, and no massive and terrifying misuse of government power.

      China's problem is they treat their working class like crap. This is the kind of crap you have to resort to when you need to keep people from Unionizing.
      • by piojo ( 995934 )

        Know how we solved it? Mostly cops giving out tickets... no massive and terrifying misuse of government power.

        Ha, good one. You know what problem China doesn't have? A police force that scares the crap out of regular people. Most police don't even carry guns! Obviously a big part of that is that the Chinese aren't as violent as the Americans, by and large. But Chinese police mediate in a way that's almost unheard of for American cops. Conflicts are often solved without court cases.

        It's a bit of a paradox. China is certainly a police state. But the police are less likely to ruin your day than American police. Plus,

    • by currently_awake ( 1248758 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:52AM (#57686996)
      No government in history has willingly given up power.
    • I actually think the underlying idea is good, but the motivation is all wrong here. The underlying idea is basically like a credit report on an individual or the investment-grade ratings issued by such companies as Moody's. I think the main problem is not with the ratings, but with the secrecy. In particular the public parts of the information should be available to the public without paying for the harvesting and various attempts to lock it down under copyright and other schemes.

      Let me bring it home to Sla

  • by Anonymous Coward

    What happens in China is definitely a nightmare, but before we laugh at those stupid Chinese we ought to take stock of what is happening right here in the West.

    We are being monitored too. 24/7.

    What we do online.

    Who our friends are/were.

    Where we go shopping.

    What kinds of item we usually buy.

    The types of association / club we have membership in.

    Whom we met last Wednesday.

    Which TV / online streaming programs we consume.

    And so on. And so forth.

    Who is to say what's happening in China won't happen here?

    • Yes it's true in the west we are also closely monitored.

      However, there is a difference:

      * In China you are monitored to make sure you fit within the system the government thinks is desirable.

      * In the U.S. you are monitored but deviation from the system is simply recorded to be used against you if you get too out of line, or to sell things to you.

      In actual terms you have much more freedom to be yourself in the U.S., it just means enduring more ads.

      In both cases truly radical elements will have a harder and ha

  • by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:17AM (#57686932)
    any day now. Yep. Any day now. Right after we stop selling bombs to the Saudis...

    In other news, I can buy a 50" TV for $200 bucks this Black Friday. And the new iPhone is _sweet_.
  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @01:25AM (#57686944) Journal
    The Chinese government already has this information. The difference now is the information is more open, more publicly available, it's actually a good thing.
    • by gtall ( 79522 )

      All the better to make people aware of what kind of behavior can get their government's bloomers in a twist. Open doesn't mean better here, you have to learn how to think like a Communist Party Apparachik. Now go back and finish your Kool-Aid, it is good for you and contains the seeds of superior man.

  • I can see this backfiring somehow...
  • by The Evil Atheist ( 2484676 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @02:07AM (#57687022)
    Give me your tired
    Your poor
    Your huddled masses
    With a good social credit score
  • So they won't be judged based upon their thinking or clothing or reading?

    That's good, isn't it?

  • Guess they don't care that fucking bullshit like this will drive some people to suicide, they've got over a billion people so I guess they don't give a shit if they lose a few hundred million of them when they lose their minds from stress and anxiety and commit suicide in any way they can manage, because who the fuck would want to live like that?

    Yet another prime example of why, if there are indeed advanced, starfaring alien civilizations out there, that they don't bother talking to us or even letting on
  • Reality will simply conform to expectation. I'd have thought all systems would converge on that.

  • Right! That has been the staple of commie countries for pretty much the past century (read: as long as commie countries existed). Let's praise the good worker and badmouth the bad kulak and the atrocious bourgeois. Let's have worker of the week/month awards with extra rations and preferred allocation of rare goods and luxury items like cars.

    Why didn't it work, again?

    Riiight, because nobody gave a fuck since those in power who were part of the supply chain could always simply take what they wanted even if th

  • by Qbertino ( 265505 ) <moiraNO@SPAMmodparlor.com> on Friday November 23, 2018 @04:51AM (#57687366)

    We all know that Orwell would say "OK, I give up. I was totally wrong, this is way more sophisticated a totalitarian system than I could dream up." We all happly carry our dobbleplusgood portable televisor around with us. Add a super-controlling engieered gouvernment to that, and you're way past 1984. Big time.

    Maybe next time around I'll really ditch my regular smartphone for something else. I've allready considered stocking up on older Blackberrys. They're pretty cheap now.

  • by Gabest ( 852807 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @07:15AM (#57687680)
    You just have to report on your neighbors, and they report about you. Crowd-sourcing worked very well under the soviet communism.
  • by MrKaos ( 858439 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @07:35AM (#57687712) Journal

    This system will be heaven for people with Narcissistic Personality Disorder because they will be able to extend their abuse onto anybody they meet in a meaningful way. They will be able to charm and connive all of the social goodwill they need while causing serious damage to the people they abuse.

    Social media is the vehicle for personality disorders to spread.

  • by b0s0z0ku ( 752509 ) on Friday November 23, 2018 @07:56AM (#57687760)

    Hack the thing. The hack could come from a government, or a private organization like WikiLeaks with an interest in causing chaos. Don't destroy it, just start slightly altering people's credit.

    Just start lowering the credit of people with military training and access to guns a fractional amount. Veterans, police, military, etc. Make them slightly more angry and frustrated. Then start fractionally increasing the credit of people with borderline anti-government views. Create an angry underclass with military training and access to weapons while helping some of the people who will radicalize them do their thing.

  • by Dunbal ( 464142 ) * on Friday November 23, 2018 @08:37AM (#57687842)

    The Beijing project will improve blacklist systems so that those deemed untrustworthy will be "unable to move even a single step,"

    So basically they will create a group of people who have nothing left to lose. Well done. That's going to work out great.

  • 1984 is an instruction manual....for CCP and Google.

    See how our "progressive" overlords go high, arsholes first.

    It's absolutely hilarious how all those progressive silicon types benefit from worker's exploitation and openly support totalitarian regimes.

    Disgusting!

  • The Chinese are behind the curve. In the USA, we've had this rolled out for years.

    https://www.moneycrashers.com/... [moneycrashers.com]

    TL:DR
    Loans are tough (or impossible) to get
    If you get a loan, your rates are higher.
    Can't rent an apartment (As a landlord, *I* check credit ratings)
    Can't get some jobs (My employer checked my credit rating)
    Can't get security clearance
    You may not be able to get a cell phone contract
    Higher insurance premiums

    Trying to avoid the credit system is tough too. Try renting a car or buying an airline ti

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