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Who wants to buy the products of ‘Beijing Analytica’? Many of us (probably).

Security CCTV camera and urban video.

Security CCTV camera and urban video.


March 23, 2018   3 mins

The Cambridge Analytica scandal (three-scandals-in-one according to Nigel Cameron) rumbles on with as yet unfathomed consequences for Facebook.

However, while I am concerned about the uses and abuses of ‘surveillance capitalism’, we also need some perspective.

In the Big Brother Bake Off contest, the West is very much a runner up to the Chinese state.

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Writing for the Atlantic, Rene Chun provides an update on the use of big tech to control the world’s most populous nation. For instance you may have heard about the use of facial recognition in public conveniences:

“Dystopia starts with 23.6 inches of toilet paper. That’s how much the dispensers at the entrance of the public restrooms at Beijing’s Temple of Heaven dole out in a program involving facial-recognition scanners—part of the president’s ‘Toilet Revolution,’ which seeks to modernize public toilets. Want more? Forget it. If you go back to the scanner before nine minutes are up, it will recognize you and issue this terse refusal: ‘Please try again later.’”

“To each according to his need” – Lenin would be proud.

You may also have heard about the use of facial recognition with public display screens to shame jaywalkers:

“Don’t even think about jaywalking in Jinan, the capital of Shandong province. Last year, traffic-management authorities there started using facial recognition to crack down. When a camera mounted above one of 50 of the city’s busiest intersections detects a jaywalker, it snaps several photos and records a video of the violation. The photos appear on an overhead screen so the offender can see that he or she has been busted…”

But that’s just stage one in the shaming process:

“The photos… are cross-checked with the images in a regional police database. Within 20 minutes, snippets of the perp’s ID number and home address are displayed on the crosswalk screen.”

These examples may be more Kafkaesque than Orwellian in their absurdity – but the thing is that they work. Chun provides no statistics on toilet paper consumption in Beijing, but jaywalking in Jinan is down by a whopping 90%.

Perhaps the most insidious aspect of China’s deployment of surveillance tech is that it aims to please:

“Many exist somewhere in the range between helpful and unsettling: A ‘smart boarding system’ from the tech giant Baidu reduces airport check-in to a one-second face scan; at KFC China’s ‘smart restaurant’ in Beijing, customers stand in front of a screen, have their face scanned… and receive menu suggestions based on their age, sex, and facial expression… A female-only university dormitory has even employed facial recognition to keep non-residents out.”

This seems entirely befitting the country’s hybrid communist-capitalist system – all very big brother, but with great customer service.

“The capitalists will sell us the rope we will hang them with” was another one of Lenin’s zippy one-liners. However, what I fear is that China will sell us the rope we hang ourselves with.

Rene Chun observes that China has built the world’s “most advanced surveillance state.” My prediction is that, bit-by-bit, they will export it to the West as state-of-the-art people-management systems. What’s more the demand will come from the people themselves.

For instance, compared to the current airport obstacle course who wouldn’t want to have a one-second face scan instead?

And those name-and-shame camera systems – I could think of a few uses for those. We already have speed cameras on our roads, but what if they could also catch persistent tailgaters or the jerks who throw litter out of car windows. There’s plenty of people who would vote for that sort of thing.

For all the concern about what tech industries are doing behind our backs, the real threat to freedom will come from what they dangle before our eyes.


Peter Franklin is Associate Editor of UnHerd. He was previously a policy advisor and speechwriter on environmental and social issues.

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Peter KE
PK
Peter KE
3 years ago

Unfortunately the article lacks balance. Just in case you have forgotten the Conservative party won the election and labour have no right at the table with their socialist and PC rubbish. The unions are not helping the children needing to return to school and are a block on progress.

We should not be in lockdown still and as in Denmark the primary school children should be back at school and reducing the damage to education.

Andrew Baldwin
AB
Andrew Baldwin
3 years ago

“Trump will inevitably claim that he got there first [in being anti-China] and that Democrats were slow to recognise the threat.” It’s more than just a claim, isn’t it? It’s a simple statement of fact. I was really happy that Trump won in 2016, but was leery of his anti-PRC rhetoric, afraid, like a lot of people, that he might launch a trade war that would take us into a global recession. Now we have a global recession, due not to Trump, but to President Xi Jinping. Even here in Canada, where the obsequiousness of our Liberal government to the PRC knows almost no bounds, the polling data shows a tremendous hardening of public attitudes towards Communist China, and I am sure it is worse in the US. All credit to Trump and his advisers for seeing the magnitude of the threat first. They were more farseeing than most of us. I am not a politico and don’t know if Trump will win, but he certainly deserves to.

Joey Lemur
Joey Lemur
3 years ago

Matthew, this is wonderfully stated, though of course maddening to read. “Safetyism” is a term that encapsulates this bureaucratic nannying quite well, and far too many people are happy to just go along with it. I am reminded of Mike Rowe’s exhortations that instead of “safety first”, we should be valuing “safety third”. He says it a bit tongue in cheek, but only just. All of these governors (like Cuomo) stating that “even if we save one life, it’s worth it” cannot actually believe it; otherwise they would advocate a 20 mph speed limit everywhere, etc.

It just the simplest of things to understand that everything has risks and tradeoffs, but somehow these morons can’t bring themselves to make that case in public; they seem to only know how to pander these days, as if there is NO middle ground between two extremes. Your suspicion around their political motivations is being confirmed every day. Hell will truly freeze over if any of them actually get around to admitting that they were wrong about anything in this situation.

I hope you article gets a very wide reading.

Michael Whittock
MW
Michael Whittock
3 years ago

I agree with the main argument of this article.
However I would like to take issue with the Office of National Statistics declaration, quoted here,that bus drivers are low skilled. With respect most people would be able to be security guards or shop workers, but not every one will have the skill and character to be a bus driver. To drive an Enviro 400 around busy city streets or an Optare along country roads takes intense concentration and advanced driving skill. In addition a driver must relate to passengers and deal with fares and any problems which may arise. They deserve more respect than they get and should be classed as key workers and paid a better wage. They do have people’s lives in their hands.
They are also particularly vulnerable during the present crisis and not all companies have given adequate protective equipment. They are also very much on the frontline. Give them a clap on Thursday evening too.

Bryan Dale
BD
Bryan Dale
3 years ago

The first paragraph is a list of left wing news outlets that have been predicting the collapse of the Trump presidency since he was elected. There may be a few Rino Republicans worried about their predictions but the majority understand that those publications are fake news.

johntshea2
johntshea2
3 years ago

Excellent! And “Why We Drive” sounds like a timely tome.

Andrew Roman
Andrew Roman
3 years ago

The ideology you mention is usually sold as the precautionary principle: better safe than sorry. The problem with that principle is that it is applied to an extreme, as if precaution is unlimited, has no upper boundaries. This seeks to justify increasing authoritarianism in Western countries by insisting that the precautions taken, even if clearly ineffective or irrelevant, are merely in support of the precautionary principle.

T J Putnam
T J Putnam
3 years ago

More worried about those taking liberties than ‘restrictions on our liberty,’ myself. No need to dress up impatience as cod political philosophy. Cut a bit of space for those who are trying to recover a situation they let slip badly, they now know how easily it could all happen again and they’re not really sure what counts most. Close analysis of cluster development over time does show that >80% of transmission so far has come from <20% of contacts, so general constraints are less cost effective than focusing on superspreader patterns of behaviour and contexts, if they can be clearly identified. Open ended chains of contact and places of multiple contact are a start. Clubbing has both, so do funerals and other community social gatherings, so off the menu pre-vaccine. Many shopping and work scenarios are manageable with care, but transport is a nightmare as are classroom education and residential institutions. Cross-generational contact is problematic, and the key group is middle aged rather than elderly. 45-70 has the highest excess deaths and occupies pivotal social and economic positions. Unpicking not easy, and there’s no shared ‘common sense’ to help.

Lindsay Gatward
Lindsay Gatward
3 years ago

Here’s an informed interview about Lockdown error. and shows we should not be so frightened? https://www.youtube.com/wat

Lindsay Gatward
Lindsay Gatward
3 years ago
naillik48
naillik48
3 years ago

Good morning moderators,
I posted a comment yesterday which is there in my account but not in the section below??

simon taylor
simon taylor
3 years ago

Great article.