On May 19, China’s top law enforcement agency released measures for the roll-out of “cyber IDs” (网络身份认证), a new form of user identification to monitor internet users. Although the measures were [released as a draft] (…substack.com/…/lingua-sinica-newsletter-8-august) over the summer last year, they have only just been finalized, and will come into effect in mid-July.
According to the measures, introduced by the Ministry of Public Security (MPS), each internet user in China will be issued with a unique “web number,” or wanghao (网号), that is linked to their personal information. While these IDs are, according to the MPS notice, to be issued on a strictly voluntary basis through public service platforms, the government appears to have been working on this system for quite some time — and state media are strongly promoting it as a means of guaranteeing personal “information security” (信息安全). With big plans afoot for how these IDs will be deployed, one obvious question is whether these measures will remain voluntary.
Xanthobilly@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
All governments are moving this direction as the march towards authoritarianism accelerates and it’ll take VPNs, meshnets, encryption, and other alternatives to push back.
lupusblackfur@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
All of which will, of course, soon become illegal and the simple use/possession of which will verify that user as an “anti-govt” subversive worthy of deportation, incarceration, or worse.
🤷♂️
atticus88th@lemmy.world 2 weeks ago
Even blue states in the U.S. are going this direction.
Hoard your data folks!
Venus_Ziegenfalle@feddit.org 2 weeks ago
Even the EU is. It’s looking bleak in that department.