CASE STUDY: THE GREAT FIREWALL OF CHINA
I have heard of China’s banning on the social networking service like Google, Facebook, Twitter, WhatsApp and other foreign websites, and I am sure most of us know that. The alleged “Great Firewall” of China is blocking the citizens’ access to the separate world and even each other. While the Chinese were long protected by the Great Wall, now they are also fenced by the “Great Firewall”, which is a digital wall that is controlling the users’ Internet access to the World Wide Web from inside the People’s Republic of China. All the social apps and news agencies are banned to the Chinese Internet user. The government supports the Chinese providers like Baidu (a Chinese comparable to Google) or WeChat (a social media platform). Moreover, the foreign companies, the national providers cooperate fully with the Chinese authorities (Maags 2019).
CHINA’S SURVEILLANCE SYSTEM
China has developed a massive surveillance system comprising of millions of cameras fortified with facial recognition technology. The surveillance system sits on the lamp posts and outside of buildings and streets, where they can identify individuals. Besides, some of China’s largest companies selling their tech abroad and signing the deals globally. This raise concerns of data being tapped back to China, in which the dictatorial governments use the tech in expanding their power and eventually the Chinese Communist Party have more power abroad (Kharpal 2019).
SOCIAL CREDIT SYSTEM
By 2020, China is planning to rank its people based on their “social credit”. According to their scores, they can either be rewarded or punished. A person’s social scores can shift up and shift down giving their behaviour, like private financial credit scores. The people can be punished through banning them from flying or getting thee train, curbing their Internet speeds, banning them or their kids to enter the best schools, stopping them to get the best jobs, keeping them out of the best hotels, getting their dog taken away, being publicly named as a bad citizen and so much more (Ma 2018). The Social Credit System maybe can help to implant good behaviour and provide safety to the citizens. However, the citizens would not have any privacy at all. They are being watched and judged every seconds of their life. Even the tiniest mistake that they do would be recorded and they could be punished when it accumulated. I know I would feel suffocated, insecure and anxious the whole time.
In my opinion, being too strict with the citizens are not going to do good for them. They most probably are not aware of anything that is happening outside of their country.
REFERENCES:
Maags, C 2019, The Great Firewall of China, Fair Observer, viewed 22 November 2019 <https://www.fairobserver.com/region/asia_pacific/great-firewall-china-censorship-chinese-news-today-vpn-china-38018/>.
Kharpal, A 2019, China’s surveillance tech is spreading globally, raising concerns about Beijing’s influence, CNBC, viewed 22 November 2019 <https://www.cnbc.com/2019/10/08/china-is-exporting-surveillance-tech-like-facial-recognition-globally.html>.
Ma, A 2018, China has started ranking citizens with a creepy ‘social credit’ system — here’s what you can do wrong, and the embarrassing, demeaning ways they can punish you, Business Insider, viewed 22 November 2019 <https://www.businessinsider.my/china-social-credit-system-punishments-and-rewards-explained-2018-4/?r=US&IR=T>.












