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Software Privacy

Moscow To Launch Mandatory Surveillance App To Track Residents In Coronavirus Lockdown (npr.org) 77

An anonymous reader quotes a report from NPR: City authorities in Moscow are rolling out new digital "social monitoring" tools targeting the public, after what officials say were constant violations of the city's quarantine imposed this week to fight the spread of the new coronavirus. Under restrictions in place since Monday, most of the city's 12 million residents must remain indoors, barring a few exceptions -- like trips to the supermarket or pharmacy, taking out the trash or briefly walking the dog. But starting Thursday, Muscovites will have their movements tracked through a mandatory app required on their smartphones. Don't have one? The city says it will lend out devices.

In addition, Moscow residents will be obligated to register for a government-issued QR code -- a small square matrix bar code containing personal data. What information the codes will hold isn't yet clear. But Russians must present it on their smartphones or carry a printout of their QR profiles to present to police, when requested. (City officials say they're also preparing to educate the public -- and elder Russians, in particular -- on what a QR code actually is.) The new tools will merge with existing street cameras and face recognition software to quickly identify residents who stray from their homes and/or quarantines, say authorities.
President Putin also signed a bill into law on Wednesday that introduces criminal penalties for skipping quarantine and infecting others. They include fines and up to seven years in prison.
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Moscow To Launch Mandatory Surveillance App To Track Residents In Coronavirus Lockdown

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  • by PPH ( 736903 ) on Thursday April 02, 2020 @04:01PM (#59902356)

    Small communication problem in China.

  • Just a few days ago there was an article about how according to the Russian authorities there wasn't any problem with covid there.

    How are the North Koreans doing, anyway?

    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Thursday April 02, 2020 @04:18PM (#59902430)

      By decree of Dear Leader, there is no Covid in Korea. Dear Leader told Covid to stay in dirty South and Covid feared Dear Leader so much that it heeded, yes, Dear Leader commands not only heaven and earth but also every tiny virus.

    • by EvilSS ( 557649 )
      NK has cured the virus using a therapy regimen of high speed lead bolus injected directly through the patient’s forehead, followed by intense heat therapy.
    • There probably isn't. They've living in a fairly totalitarian police state, which usually sucks but when it comes to controlling a pandemic is actually useful. Wouldn't want to live there myself, but you can bet it isn't a lockdown-as-much-or-as-little-as-you-feel-like over there.
    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Russia closed more early and did try to get ready for actual health work.
      So their rate of wuflu is less now and they can actually track the sick.

      vs Western and EU nations that stayed open to the world longer and now have the medical issues they could have slowed.
      But for free movement of people getting more political support over the health of citizens..

      Russia understood what Communist China did and was doing. ie try and let wuflu spread as much as quickly due to politics.
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        And also, following China, using it as an excuse to extend the powers of the police state.

      • If the Russians did and are doing such a good job then why does it look like their numbers are being underreported? Couple that with a law that allows the government to arrest anyone who contradicts the official government narrative. I will give you one thing, you are definitely reliable when it comes to trotting out Russian propaganda. However, you might be more effective if you used some sock puppets. Posting the same dumb kind of propaganda on the same account isn't very effective.
  • Sales of second hand phones skyrocketed so people have one they can leave at home in quarantine.

    • Sales of second hand phones skyrocketed so people have one they can leave at home in quarantine.

      ~ Opportunist

      And why cameras are trained on the streets, as in China, and now trivial to install, but to monitor is the secret sauce of state secrets.

      As I traveled through the middle east through the Arab Spring, the growth of little web cameras installed at a border official's kiosk, the cheap in appearance sort given away at the end of AOL's predominance, became standard. A photo was taken, but those nations didn't have the software to work with the photos. Yet one starts somewhere and people having the belief their

  • by OneHundredAndTen ( 1523865 ) on Thursday April 02, 2020 @04:18PM (#59902426)
    Those are the basic instincts of the Cold War relic, ex-KGB thug at the Kremlin.
    • You can't exactly "forget" those secrets.

      Once you're in, you're in.
      I know this for a fact, for the KGB/FSB, CIA, BND, GCHQ and Mossad. Don't ask.

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Thats keeping Russia citizens safe from wuflu.
      Russia had the skills and the gov understood to start early too.
      • by gtall ( 79522 )

        Thank you, Comrade, for that unbiased assessment of Tsar Putin's Regime. Now we returns you to your regularly scheduled paranoia sponsored by the FSB.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    I've walked 3 km from my house today to pick up supplies from the office. The city is not closed. A few couples walked the streets not looking like they had to. Construction workers were busy at a building site erecting a new apartment block. My workplace had about 1/5 the usual number of staff present (we are not in any way a critical operation). The building entrances were open. A city bus was packed full with central-Asian migrants returning from their day at work.

    I am all for a responsible behavior, but

    • by AHuxley ( 892839 )
      Most nations are allowing some work to go on. ie professional and vital work must go on.
      Test all the workers and a building site stays safe.
      Few nations have a 100% stop work for all.
      The idea been early testing, tracking of the sick and more testing.
      Not allowing sick people into Russia to wonder around for weeks.

      Re "The virus may survive just fine in the significant fraction of the population that keeps going around doing their daily tasks. "
      Most nations now understand community spread due to the wee
  • Show us your (digital) papers, Comrade!

    Sucks to be you, Russian citizens. Guess you'd better get used to it, because the likelihood that Putin will ever recind that order when the pandemic is over is precisely zero.

    What's next, Putin? Rebuild the Berlin Wall?
    I've said before that I thought Putin wanted to build Soviet Union 2.0, and I think he, like some other world leaders, is leveraging the current crisis to check off some things on his 'to-do' list, like in this case ensuring that he can track the movements of 100% of Russian citizens, so

    • by znrt ( 2424692 )

      What's next, Putin?

      trump doing the same, and claiming he had the idea two months before it was a thing.

  • by Impy the Impiuos Imp ( 442658 ) on Thursday April 02, 2020 @05:51PM (#59902882) Journal

    This is a lie. It allows thugs to track individuals, which is the goal.

    Do not give dictators the tools they need to increase their stranglehold. Do not introduce them in a free society because of an emergency. This is the lesson from history with plenty of examples of collapsed democracies.

    You need no longer imagine a boot stepping on a human face, forever.

  • And we can see if Putin was just being a dictator, or had done the right thing and saved the life of many Russians, by comparing their death toll with other “free” countries.

    • Which one?
      The official one by them,
      the guessed one by us,
      or the real one we have no chance in hell of ever finding out?

  • so no apple there any more or will apple force install this app with no review or banning.

  • I bet they were happy, to break out the old policies.

    Only the yellow stars were prettier in color, and you just needed to prove innocence when passing an actual copy not all the time.

  • by nickol ( 208154 ) on Friday April 03, 2020 @01:37AM (#59903918)

    These are old news, the situation changed yesterday.

    1. IT specialists criticized the application for the following reasons:
    - it requires ALL possible permissions on Android
    - it violates Russian laws by sending personal data to foreign servers
    - it sends data unencrypted

    2. The app has been decompiled and now is on Github:
    https://github.com/iTaysonLab/gorkiy

    3. The app was downvoted in Play Market and now it is not there.

    4. Moscow government allegedly spent 180 000 000 roubles ($2.5 million) to design this
    app, having "hello-world-style design" (quote from Github above)

The unfacts, did we have them, are too imprecisely few to warrant our certitude.

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