China’s Plan to Organize Its Society Relies on ‘Big Data’ to Rate Everyone

October 24th, 2016

Via: Washington Post:

Imagine a world where an authoritarian government monitors everything you do, amasses huge amounts of data on almost every interaction you make, and awards you a single score that measures how “trustworthy” you are.

In this world, anything from defaulting on a loan to criticizing the ruling party, from running a red light to failing to care for your parents properly, could cause you to lose points.

And in this world, your score becomes the ultimate truth of who you are — determining whether you can borrow money, get your children into the best schools or travel abroad; whether you get a room in a fancy hotel, a seat in a top restaurant — or even just get a date.

This is not the dystopian superstate of Steven Spielberg’s “Minority Report,” in which all-knowing police stop crime before it happens. But it could be China by 2020.

It is the scenario contained in China’s ambitious plans to develop a far-reaching social credit system, a plan that the Communist Party hopes will build a culture of “sincerity” and a “harmonious socialist society” where “keeping trust is glorious.”

One Response to “China’s Plan to Organize Its Society Relies on ‘Big Data’ to Rate Everyone”

  1. stimoceiver says:

    Extra Credit put together a very well-done video on Sesame Credit and the social implications of a society the size of China implementing a socially networked/distributed ideological compliance score to rank its citizens. I don’t normally blog, at all, but seeing Extra Credit’s remarkably well-done video around the beginning of the “Pokémon Go” craze among US adults inspired me to pen a few thoughts on Sesame Credit, Pokémon Go, and the Future of Technocracy. Check it out:

    https://stimoceiver.wordpress.com/2016/07/15/sesame-credit-pokemon-go-and-the-future-of-technocracy/

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