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11 oeuvres 243 utilisateurs 2 critiques

A propos de l'auteur

For more than a decade, Kai Strittmatter was the China correspondent for Germany's national newspaper Sddeutsche Zeitung. He has studied China for more than thirty years. He lives in Copenhagen.

Œuvres de Kai Strittmatter

Étiqueté

Partage des connaissances

Date de naissance
1965
Sexe
male
Nationalité
Germany
Professions
journalist
Agent
Markus Hoffmann

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Critiques

In the last few years, much has been written about Big Brother and the surveillance state. In the area of social control of its citizens, China is far ahead of the rest of the world.

Under the Social Credit System, all citizens are given a three-digit number. Think of it as a FICO score that covers all aspects of daily life. A bad score can negatively affect a person's ability to travel by plane or train, their eligibility for certain jobs and their ability to get their children into a better school. No matter how innocuous an online posting, if it's even the tiniest bit not appreciated by the Chinese Communist Party, it will be deleted within minutes. The writer can also expect a very unfriendly visit from the police.

To get access to the lucrative Chinese market, Western companies, like Google, have agreed to remove all references to Tiananmen Square, 1989, June 4, or any other terms that the Communist Party would like to make disappear. There is facial recognition technology that can pick one person out of a stadium. In western China, more than one million Muslims have been sent to "re-education" camps.

This is a fascinating book. To see the "future" of total social control, look at present-day China. This book makes the worst of George Orwell look tame and boring. It is very much worth reading.
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
plappen | 1 autre critique | Jan 3, 2022 |
A good , decent Book with insight into the Chinese political culture and leaders and society and the ways that that might influence the west and affect the ways of the European Union in particular in the near future. Not quite the Orwellian future you might expect but a more manipulative, fear driven, technological surveillance society. As an introduction into the culture of China and how things might change in the near future this is worth a look.
 
Signalé
aadyer | 1 autre critique | Jan 15, 2020 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
11
Membres
243
Popularité
#93,557
Évaluation
4.1
Critiques
2
ISBN
30
Langues
4

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