Mass Surveillance in China
-
China and TibetAttacks on women’s rights activists including in the context of the #MeToo movement (Articles 1, 2, 3, and 7) Two years after the #MeToo movement took off in China, Chinese women’s rights activists face a political environment in which the Chinese Communist Party’s control over the internet, media, and independent activism is tighter than the previous 30 years.[1] Since the Chinese government prohibits collective actions, the country’s #MeToo movement has not been able to manifest in mass street protests. But individuals who have suffered abuse have taken their cases to court, demonstrating extraordinary determination and resilience.
-
China: Big Data Program Targets Xinjiang’s Muslims
Leaked List of Over 2,000 Detainees Demonstrates Automated Repression
-
News
-
-
China: Big Data Program Targets Xinjiang’s Muslims
Leaked List of Over 2,000 Detainees Demonstrates Automated Repression
-
China: Fighting COVID-19 With Automated Tyranny
Government Response Hinged on Invasive New Surveillance Methods
-
-
Interview: China’s ‘Big Brother’ App
Unprecedented View into Mass Surveillance of Xinjiang’s Muslims
-
China’s Bumbling Police State
The only thing protecting human rights from the bureaucracy? Inefficiency.
-
-
China: Big Data Fuels Crackdown in Minority Region
Predictive Policing Program Flags Individuals for Investigations, Detentions
-
China: Minority Region Collects DNA from Millions
Private Information Gathered by Police, Under Guise of Public Health Program
-
China’s Chilling ‘Social Credit’ Blacklist
A lawyer is barred from buying a plane ticket because a court found his apology ‘insincere.’
-
China: Police ‘Big Data’ Systems Violate Privacy, Target Dissent
Automated Systems Track People Authorities Claim ‘Threatening’
-
China: Voice Biometric Collection Threatens Privacy
Police, AI Giant Collaboration in Legal Gray Area