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NAOMI
KLIEN |
P.R.SIDDHARTHA |
|
|
CHAIRMAN
|
| WORLD'S
BEST ANALYSIS |
|
BOARD
OF EDITORS |
| politicsparty@gmail.com |
"POLITICAL
CHEMISTRY" |
+91-9958976000 |
|
| CHINA
BUILDS HI-TECH POLICE STATE. READY FOR EXPORT. |
| WILL
ADVANI ALLOW KARAT TO IMPORT “POLICE-STATE”
TO INDIA? |
|
| CHINA’S
ALL SEEING EYE |
| By
NAOMI KLIEN |
| 17
JULY 2008 |
|
| |
| |
| With
the help of U.S. defense contractors, China is building the
prototype for a high-tech police state. It is ready for export.
Thirty years ago, the city of Shenzhen didn't
exist.
Back in those days, it was a string of small
fishing villages and collectively run rice paddies, a place
of rutted dirt roads and traditional temples. That was before
the Communist Party chose it — thanks to its location
close to Hong Kong's port — to be China's first "special
economic zone," one of only four areas where capitalism
would be permitted on a trial basis.
The theory behind the experiment was that the
"real" China would keep its socialist soul intact
while profiting from the private-sector jobs and industrial
development created in Shenzhen. The result was a city of
pure commerce, undiluted by history or rooted culture —
the crack cocaine of capitalism. It was a force so addictive
to investors that the Shenzhen experiment quickly expanded,
swallowing not just the surrounding Pearl River Delta, which
now houses roughly 100,000 factories, but much of the rest
of the country as well.
Today, Shenzhen is a city of 12.4 million people,
and there is a good chance that at least half of everything
you own was made here: iPods, laptops, sneakers, flatscreen
TVs, cellphones, jeans, maybe your desk chair, possibly your
car and almost certainly your printer.
Hundreds of luxury condominiums tower over the
city; many are more than 40 stories high, topped with three-story
penthouses. Newer neighborhoods like Keji Yuan are packed
with ostentatiously modern corporate campuses and decadent
shopping malls. Rem Koolhaas, Prada's favorite architect,
is building a stock exchange in Shenzhen that looks like it
floats — a design intended, he says, to "suggest
and illustrate the process of the market." A still-under-construction
superlight subway will soon connect it all at high speed;
every car has multiple TV screens broadcasting over a Wi-Fi
network. At night, the entire city lights up like a pimped-out
Hummer, with each five-star hotel and office tower competing
over who can put on the best light show.
Many of the big American players have set up
shop in Shenzhen, but they look singularly unimpressive next
to their Chinese competitors. The research complex for China's
telecom giant Huawei, for instance, is so large that it has
its own highway exit, while its workers ride home on their
own bus line. Pressed up against Shenzhen's disco shopping
centers, Wal-Mart superstores — of which there are nine
in the city — look like dreary corner stores. (China
almost seems to be mocking us: "You call that a superstore?")
McDonald's and KFC appear every few blocks, but they seem
almost retro next to the Real Kung Fu fast-food chain, whose
mascot is a stylized Bruce Lee.
American commentators like CNN's Jack Cafferty
dismiss the Chinese as "the same bunch of goons and thugs
they've been for the last 50 years." But nobody told
the people of Shenzhen, who are busily putting on a 24-hour-a-day
show called "America" — a pirated version
of the original, only with flashier design, higher profits
and less complaining. This has not happened by accident. China
today, epitomized by Shenzhen's transition from mud to megacity
in 30 years, represents a new way to organize society. Sometimes
called "market Stalinism," it is a potent hybrid
of the most powerful political tools of authoritarian communism
— central planning, merciless repression, constant surveillance
— harnessed to advance the goals of global capitalism.
Now, as China prepares to showcase its economic
advances during the upcoming Olympics in Beijing, Shenzhen
is once again serving as a laboratory, a testing ground for
the next phase of this vast social experiment. Over the past
two years, some 200,000 surveillance cameras have been installed
throughout the city. Many are in public spaces, disguised
as lampposts. The closed-circuit TV cameras will soon be connected
to a single, nationwide network, an all-seeing system that
will be capable of tracking and identifying anyone who comes
within its range — a project driven in part by U.S.
technology and investment. Over the next three years, Chinese
security executives predict they will install as many as 2
million CCTVs in Shenzhen, which would make it the most watched
city in the world. (Security-crazy London boasts only half
a million surveillance cameras.)
The security cameras are just one part of a
much broader high-tech surveillance and censorship program
known in China as "Golden Shield." The end goal
is to use the latest people-tracking technology — thoughtfully
supplied by American giants like IBM, Honeywell and General
Electric — to create an airtight consumer cocoon: a
place where Visa cards, Adidas sneakers, China Mobile cellphones,
McDonald's Happy Meals, Tsingtao beer and UPS delivery (to
name just a few of the official sponsors of the Beijing Olympics)
can be enjoyed under the unblinking eye of the state, without
the threat of democracy breaking out. With political unrest
on the rise across China, the government hopes to use the
surveillance shield to identify and counteract dissent before
it explodes into a mass movement like the one that grabbed
the world's attention at Tiananmen Square.
Remember how we've always been told that free
markets and free people go hand in hand? That was a lie. It
turns out that the most efficient delivery system for capitalism
is actually a communist-style police state, fortressed with
American "homeland security" technologies, pumped
up with "war on terror" rhetoric. And the global
corporations currently earning superprofits from this social
experiment are unlikely to be content if the lucrative new
market remains confined to cities such as Shenzhen. Like everything
else assembled in China with American parts, Police State
2.0 is ready for export to a neighborhood near you.
Zhang Yi points to an empty bracket on the dashboard
of his black Honda. "It used to hold my GPS, but I leave
it at home now," he says. "It's the crime —
they are too easy to steal." He quickly adds, "Since
the surveillance cameras came in, we have seen a very dramatic
decrease in crime in Shenzhen."
After driving for an hour past hundreds of factory
gates and industrial parks, we pull up to a salmon-color building
that Zhang partly owns. This is the headquarters of FSAN:
CCTV System. Zhang, a prototypical Shenzhen yuppie in a royal-blue
button-down shirt and black-rimmed glasses, apologizes for
the mess. Inside, every inch of space is lined with cardboard
boxes filled with electronics parts and finished products.
Zhang opened the factory two and a half years
ago, and his investment has already paid off tenfold. That
kind of growth isn't unusual in the field he has chosen: Zhang's
factory makes digital surveillance cameras, turning out 400,000
a year. Half of the cameras are shipped overseas, destined
to peer from building ledges in London, Manhattan and Dubai
as part of the global boom in "homeland security."
The other half stays in China, many right here in Shenzhen
and in neighboring Guangzhou, another megacity of 12 million
people. China's market for surveillance cameras enjoyed revenues
of $4.1 billion last year, a jump of 24 percent from 2006.
Zhang escorts me to the assembly line, where
rows of young workers, most of them women, are bent over semiconductors,
circuit boards, tiny cables and bulbs. At the end of each
line is "quality control," which consists of plugging
the camera into a monitor and making sure that it records.
We enter a showroom where Zhang and his colleagues meet with
clients. The walls are lined with dozens of camera models:
domes of all sizes, specializing in day and night, wet and
dry, camouflaged to look like lights, camouflaged to look
like smoke detectors, explosion-proof, the size of a soccer
ball, the size of a ring box.
The workers at FSAN don't just make surveillance
cameras; they are constantly watched by them. While they work,
the silent eyes of rotating lenses capture their every move.
When they leave work and board buses, they are filmed again.
When they walk to their dormitories, the streets are lined
with what look like newly installed streetlamps, their white
poles curving toward the sidewalk with black domes at the
ends. Inside the domes are high-resolution cameras, the same
kind the workers produce at FSAN. Some blocks have three or
four, one every few yards. One Shenzhen-based company, China
Security & Surveillance Technology, has developed software
to enable the cameras to alert police when an unusual number
of people begin to gather at any given location.
In 2006, the Chinese government mandated that
all Internet cafes (as well as restaurants and other "entertainment"
venues) install video cameras with direct feeds to their local
police stations. Part of a wider surveillance project known
as "Safe Cities," the effort now encompasses 660
municipalities in China. It is the most ambitious new government
program in the Pearl River Delta, and supplying it is one
of the fastest-growing new markets in Shenzhen.
But the cameras that Zhang manufactures are
only part of the massive experiment in population control
that is under way here. "The big picture," Zhang
tells me in his office at the factory, "is integration."
That means linking cameras with other forms of surveillance:
the Internet, phones, facial-recognition software and GPS
monitoring.
This is how this Golden Shield will work: Chinese
citizens will be watched around the clock through networked
CCTV cameras and remote monitoring of computers. They will
be listened to on their phone calls, monitored by digital
voice-recognition technologies. Their Internet access will
be aggressively limited through the country's notorious system
of online controls known as the "Great Firewall."
Their movements will be tracked through national ID cards
with scannable computer chips and photos that are instantly
uploaded to police databases and linked to their holder's
personal data. This is the most important element of all:
linking all these tools together in a massive, searchable
database of names, photos, residency information, work history
and biometric data. When Golden Shield is finished, there
will be a photo in those databases for every person in China:
1.3 billion faces.
Shenzhen is the place where the shield has received
its most extensive fortifications — the place where
all the spy toys are being hooked together and tested to see
what they can do. "The central government eventually
wants to have city-by-city surveillance, so they could just
sit and monitor one city and its surveillance system as a
whole," Zhang says. "It's all part of that bigger
project. Once the tests are done and it's proven, they will
be spreading from the big province to the cities, even to
the rural farmland."
In fact, the rollout of the high-tech shield
is already well under way.
When the Tibetan capital of Lhasa was set alight
in March, the world caught a glimpse of the rage that lies
just under the surface in many parts of China. And though
the Lhasa riots stood out for their ethnic focus and their
intensity, protests across China are often shockingly militant.
In July 2006, workers at a factory near Shenzhen expressed
their displeasure over paltry pay by overturning cars, smashing
computers and opening fire hydrants. In March of last year,
when bus fares went up in the rural town of Zhushan, 20,000
people took to the streets and five police vehicles were torched.
Indeed, China has seen levels of political unrest in recent
years unknown since 1989, the year student protests were crushed
with tanks in Tiananmen Square. In 2005, by the government's
own measure, there were at least 87,000 "mass incidents"
— governmentspeak for large-scale protests or riots.
This increased unrest — a process aided
by access to cellphones and the Internet — represents
more than a security problem for the leaders in Beijing. It
threatens their whole model of command-and-control capitalism.
China's rapid economic growth has relied on the ability of
its rulers to raze villages and move mountains to make way
for the latest factory towns and shopping malls. If the people
living on those mountains use blogs and text messaging to
launch a mountain-people's-rights uprising with each new project,
and if they link up with similar uprisings in other parts
of the country, China's dizzying expansion could grind to
a halt.
At the same time, the success of China's ravenous
development creates its own challenges. Every rural village
that is successfully razed to make way for a new project creates
more displaced people who join the ranks of the roughly 130
million migrants roaming the country looking for work. By
2025, it is projected that this "floating" population
will swell to more than 350 million. Many will end up in cities
like Shenzhen, which is already home to 7 million migrant
laborers.
But while China's cities need these displaced
laborers to work in factories and on construction sites, they
are unwilling to offer them the same benefits as permanent
residents: highly subsidized education and health care, as
well as other public services. While migrants can live for
decades in big cities like Shenzhen and Guangzhou, their residency
remains fixed to the rural community where they were born,
a fact encoded on their national ID cards. As one young migrant
in Guangzhou put it to me, "The local people want to
make money from migrant workers, but they don't want to give
them rights. But why are the local people so rich? Because
of the migrant workers!"
With its militant protests and mobile population,
China confronts a fundamental challenge. How can it maintain
a system based on two dramatically unequal categories of people:
the winners, who get the condos and cars, and the losers,
who do the heavy labor and are denied those benefits? More
urgently, how can it do this when information technology threatens
to link the losers together into a movement so large it could
easily overwhelm the country's elites?
The answer is Golden Shield.
When Tibet erupted in protests recently, the
surveillance system was thrown into its first live test, with
every supposedly liberating tool of the Information Age —
cellphones, satellite television, the Internet — transformed
into a method of repression and control. As soon as the protests
gathered steam, China reinforced its Great Firewall, blocking
its citizens from accessing dozens of foreign news outlets.
In some parts of Tibet, Internet access was shut down altogether.
Many people trying to phone friends and family found that
their calls were blocked, and cellphones in Lhasa were blitzed
with text messages from the police: "Severely battle
any creation or any spreading of rumors that would upset or
frighten people or cause social disorder or illegal criminal
behavior that could damage social stability."
During the first week of protests, foreign journalists
who tried to get into Tibet were systematically turned back.
But that didn't mean that there were no cameras inside the
besieged areas. Since early last year, activists in Lhasa
have been reporting on the proliferation of black-domed cameras
that look like streetlights — just like the ones I saw
coming off the assembly line in Shenzhen. Tibetan monks complain
that cameras — activated by motion sensors — have
invaded their monasteries and prayer rooms.
During the Lhasa riots, police on the scene
augmented the footage from the CCTVs with their own video
cameras, choosing to film — rather than stop —
the violence, which left 19 dead. The police then quickly
cut together the surveillance shots that made the Tibetans
look most vicious — beating Chinese bystanders, torching
shops, ripping metal sheeting off banks — and created
a kind of copumentary: Tibetans Gone Wild. These weren't the
celestial beings in flowing robes the Beastie Boys and Richard
Gere had told us about. They were angry young men, wielding
sticks and long knives. They looked ugly, brutal, tribal.
On Chinese state TV, this footage played around the clock.
The police also used the surveillance footage
to extract mug shots of the demonstrators and rioters. Photos
of the 21 "most wanted" Tibetans, many taken from
that distinctive "streetlamp" view of the domed
cameras, were immediately circulated to all of China's major
news portals, which obediently posted them to help out with
the manhunt. The Internet became the most powerful police
tool. Within days, several of the men on the posters were
in custody, along with hundreds of others.
The flare-up in Tibet, weeks before the Olympic
torch began its global journey, has been described repeatedly
in the international press as a "nightmare" for
Beijing. Several foreign leaders have pledged to boycott the
opening ceremonies of the games, the press has hosted an orgy
of China-bashing, and the torch became a magnet for protesters,
with anti-China banners dropped from the Eiffel Tower and
the Golden Gate Bridge. But inside China, the Tibet debacle
may actually have been a boon to the party, strengthening
its grip on power. Despite its citizens having unprecedented
access to information technology (there are as many Internet
users in China as there are in the U.S.), the party demonstrated
that it could still control what they hear and see. And what
they saw on their TVs and computer screens were violent Tibetans,
out to kill their Chinese neighbors, while police showed admirable
restraint. Tibetan solidarity groups say 140 people were killed
in the crackdown that followed the protests, but without pictures
taken by journalists, it is as if those subsequent deaths
didn't happen.
Chinese viewers also saw a world unsympathetic
to the Chinese victims of Tibetan violence, so hostile to
their country that it used a national tragedy to try to rob
them of their hard-won Olympic glory. These nationalist sentiments
freed up Beijing to go on a full-fledged witch hunt. In the
name of fighting a war on terror, security forces rounded
up thousands of Tibetan activists and supporters. The end
result is that when the games begin, much of the Tibetan movement
will be safely behind bars — along with scores of Chinese
journalists, bloggers and human-rights defenders who have
also been trapped in the government's high-tech web.
Police State 2.0 might not look good from the
outside, but on the inside, it appears to have passed its
first major test.
In Guangzhou, an hour and a half by train from
Shenzhen, Yao Ruoguang is preparing for a major test of his
own. "It's called the 10-million-faces test," he
tells me.
Yao is managing director of Pixel Solutions,
a Chinese company that specializes in producing the new high-tech
national ID cards, as well as selling facial-recognition software
to businesses and government agencies. The test, the first
phase of which is only weeks away, is being staged by the
Ministry of Public Security in Beijing. The idea is to measure
the effectiveness of face-recognition software in identifying
police suspects. Participants will be given a series of photos,
taken in a variety of situations. Their task will be to match
the images to other photos of the same people in the government's
massive database. Several biometrics companies, including
Yao's, have been invited to compete. "We have to be able
to match a face in a 10 million database in one second,"
Yao tells me. "We are preparing for that now."
The companies that score well will be first
in line for lucrative government contracts to integrate face-recognition
software into Golden Shield, using it to check for ID fraud
and to discover the identities of suspects caught on surveillance
cameras. Yao says the technology is almost there: "It
will happen next year."
When I meet Yao at his corporate headquarters,
he is feeling confident about how his company will perform
in the test. His secret weapon is that he will be using facial-recognition
software purchased from L-1 Identity Solutions, a major U.S.
defense contractor that produces passports and biometric security
systems for the U.S. government.
To show how well it works, Yao demonstrates
on himself. Using a camera attached to his laptop, he snaps
a picture of his own face, round and boyish for its 54 years.
Then he uploads it onto the company's proprietary Website,
built with L-1 software. With the cursor, he marks his own
eyes with two green plus signs, helping the system to measure
the distance between his features, a distinctive aspect of
our faces that does not change with disguises or even surgery.
The first step is to "capture the image," Yao explains.
Next is "finding the face."
He presses APPLY, telling the program to match
the new face with photos of the same person in the company's
database of 600,000 faces. Instantly, multiple photos of Yao
appear, including one taken 19 years earlier — proof
that the technology can "find a face" even when
the face has changed significantly with time."
It took 1.1 milliseconds!" Yao exclaims.
"Yeah, that's me!"
In nearby cubicles, teams of Yao's programmers
and engineers take each other's pictures, mark their eyes
with green plus signs and test the speed of their search engines.
"Everyone is preparing for the test," Yao explains.
"If we pass, if we come out number one, we are guaranteed
a market in China."
Every couple of minutes Yao's phone beeps. Sometimes
it's a work message, but most of the time it's a text from
his credit-card company, informing him that his daughter,
who lives in Australia, has just made another charge. "Every
time the text message comes, I know my daughter is spending
money!" He shrugs: "She likes designers."
Like many other security executives I interviewed
in China, Yao denies that a primary use of the technology
he is selling is to hunt down political activists. "Ninety-five
percent," he insists, "is just for regular safety."
He has, he admits, been visited by government spies, whom
he describes as "the internal-security people."
They came with grainy pictures, shot from far away or through
keyhole cameras, of "some protesters, some dissidents."
They wanted to know if Yao's facial-recognition software could
help identify the people in the photos. Yao was sorry to disappoint
them. "Honestly, the technology so far still can't meet
their needs," he says. "The photos that they show
us were just too blurry." That is rapidly changing, of
course, thanks to the spread of high-resolution CCTVs. Yet
Yao insists that the government's goal is not repression:
"If you're a [political] organizer, they want to know
your motive," he says. "So they take the picture,
give the photo, so at least they can find out who that person
is."
Until recently, Yao's photography empire was
focused on consumers — taking class photos at schools,
launching a Chinese knockoff of Flickr (the original is often
blocked by the Great Firewall), turning photos of chubby two-year-olds
into fridge magnets and lampshades. He still maintains those
businesses, which means that half of the offices at Pixel
Solutions look like they have just hosted a kid's birthday
party. The other half looks like an ominous customs office,
the walls lined with posters of terrorists in the cross hairs:
FACE MATCH, FACE PASS, FACE WATCH. When Beijing started sinking
more and more of the national budget into surveillance technologies,
Yao saw an opportunity that would make all his previous ventures
look small. Between more powerful computers, higher-resolution
cameras and a global obsession with crime and terrorism, he
figured that face recognition "should be the next dot-com."
Not a computer scientist himself — he
studied English literature in school — Yao began researching
corporate leaders in the field. He learned that face recognition
is highly controversial, with a track record of making wrong
IDs. A few companies, however, were scoring much higher in
controlled tests in the U.S. One of them was a company soon
to be renamed L-1 Identity Solutions. Based in Connecticut,
L-1 was created two years ago out of the mergers and buyouts
of half a dozen major players in the biometrics field, all
of which specialized in the science of identifying people
through distinct physical traits: fingerprints, irises, face
geometry. The mergers made L-1 a one-stop shop for biometrics.
Thanks to board members like former CIA director George Tenet,
the company rapidly became a homeland-security heavy hitter.
L-1 projects its annual revenues will hit $1 billion by 2011,
much of it from U.S. government contracts.
In 2006, Yao tells me, "I made the first
phone call and sent the first e-mail." For a flat fee
of $20,000, he gained access to the company's proprietary
software, allowing him to "build a lot of development
software based on L-1's technology." Since then, L-1's
partnership with Yao has gone far beyond that token investment.
Yao says it isn't really his own company that is competing
in the upcoming 10-million-faces test being staged by the
Chinese government: "We'll be involved on behalf of L-1
in China." Yao adds that he communicates regularly with
L1 and has visited the company's research headquarters in
New Jersey. ("Out the window you can see the Statue of
Liberty. It's such a historic place.") L1 is watching
his test preparations with great interest, Yao says. "It
seemed that they were more excited than us when we tell them
the results."
L-1's enthusiasm is hardly surprising: If Yao
impresses the Ministry of Public Security with the company's
ability to identify criminals, L-1 will have cracked the largest
potential market for biometrics in the world. But here's the
catch: As proud as Yao is to be L-1's Chinese licensee, L-1
appears to be distinctly less proud of its association with
Yao. On its Website and in its reports to investors, L-1 boasts
of contracts and negotiations with governments from Panama
and Saudi Arabia to Mexico and Turkey. China, however, is
conspicuously absent. And though CEO Bob LaPenta makes reference
to "some large international opportunities," not
once does he mention Pixel Solutions in Guangzhou.
After leaving a message with the company inquiring
about L-1's involvement in China's homeland-security market,
I get a call back from Doni Fordyce, vice president of corporate
communications. She has consulted Joseph Atick, the company's
head of research. "We have nothing in China," she
tells me. "Nothing, absolutely nothing. We are uninvolved.
We really don't have any relationships at all."
I tell Fordyce about Yao, the 10-million test,
the money he paid for the software license. She'll call me
right back. When she does, 20 minutes later, it is with this
news: "Absolutely, we've sold testing SDKs [software
development kits] to Pixel Solutions and to others [in China]
that may be entering a test." Yao's use of the technology,
she said, is "within his license" purchased from
L-1.
The company's reticence to publicize its activities
in China could have something to do with the fact that the
relationship between Yao and L-1 may well be illegal under
U.S. law. After the Chinese government sent tanks into Tiananmen
Square in 1989, Congress passed legislation barring U.S. companies
from selling any products in China that have to do with "crime
control or detection instruments or equipment." That
means not only guns but everything from police batons and
handcuffs to ink and powder for taking fingerprints, and software
for storing them. Interestingly, one of the "detection
instruments" that prompted the legislation was the surveillance
camera. Beijing had installed several clunky cameras around
Tiananmen Square, originally meant to monitor traffic flows.
Those lenses were ultimately used to identify and arrest key
pro-democracy dissidents.
"The intent of that act," a congressional
staff member with considerable China experience tells me,
"was to keep U.S. companies out of the business of helping
the Chinese police conduct their business, which might ultimately
end up as it did in 1989 in the suppression of human rights
and democracy in China."
Pixel's application of L-1 facial-recognition
software seems to fly in the face of the ban's intent. By
his own admission, Yao is already getting visits from Chinese
state spies anxious to use facial recognition to identify
dissidents. And as part of the 10-million-faces test, Yao
has been working intimately with Chinese national-security
forces, syncing L-1's software to their vast database, a process
that took a week of intensive work in Beijing. During that
time, Yao says, he was on the phone "every day"
with L-1, getting its help adapting the technology. "Because
we are representing them," he says. "We took the
test on their behalf."
In other words, this controversial U.S. "crime
control" technology has already found its way into the
hands of the Chinese police. Moreover, Yao's goal, stated
to me several times, is to use the software to land lucrative
contracts with police agencies to integrate facial recognition
into the newly built system of omnipresent surveillance cameras
and high-tech national ID cards. As part of any contract he
gets, Yao says, he will "pay L-1 a certain percentage
of our sales."
When I put the L-1 scenario to the Commerce
Department's Bureau of Industry and Security — the division
charged with enforcing the post-Tiananmen export controls
— a representative says that software kits are subject
to the sanctions if "they are exported from the U.S.
or are the foreign direct product of a U.S.-origin item."
Based on both criteria, the software kit sold to Yao seems
to fall within the ban.
When I ask Doni Fordyce at L-1 about the embargo,
she tells me, "I don't know anything about that."
Asked whether she would like to find out about it and call
me back, she replies, "I really don't want to comment,
so there is no comment." Then she hangs up.
You have probably never heard of L-1, but there
is every chance that it has heard of you. Few companies have
collected as much sensitive information about U.S. citizens
and visitors to America as L-1: It boasts a database of 60
million records, and it "captures" more than a million
new fingerprints every year. Here is a small sample of what
the company does: produces passports and passport cards for
American citizens; takes finger scans of visitors to the U.S.
under the Department of Homeland Security's massive U.S.-Visit
program; equips U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan with
"mobile iris and multimodal devices" so they can
collect biometric data in the field; maintains the State Department's
"largest facial-recognition database system"; and
produces driver's licenses in Illinois, Montana and North
Carolina. In addition, L-1 has an even more secretive intelligence
unit called SpecTal. Asked by a Wall Street analyst to discuss,
in "extremely general" terms, what the division
was doing with contracts worth roughly $100 million, the company's
CEO would only say, "Stay tuned."
It is L-1's deep integration with multiple U.S.
government agencies that makes its dealings in China so interesting:
It isn't just L-1 that is potentially helping the Chinese
police to nab political dissidents, it's U.S. taxpayers. The
technology that Yao purchased for just a few thousand dollars
is the result of Defense Department research grants and contracts
going as far back as 1994, when a young academic named Joseph
Atick (the research director Fordyce consulted on L-1's China
dealings) taught a computer at Rockefeller University to recognize
his face.
Yao, for his part, knows all about the U.S.
export controls on police equipment to China. He tells me
that L-1's electronic fingerprinting tools are "banned
from entering China" due to U.S. concerns that they will
be used to "catch the political criminals, you know,
the dissidents, more easily." He thinks he and L-1 have
found a legal loophole, however. While fingerprinting technology
appears on the Commerce Department's list of banned products,
there is no explicit mention of "face prints" —
likely because the idea was still in the realm of science
fiction when the Tiananmen Square massacre took place. As
far as Yao is concerned, that omission means that L-1 can
legally supply its facial-recognition software for use by
the Chinese government.
Whatever the legality of L-1's participation
in Chinese surveillance, it is clear that U.S. companies are
determined to break into the homeland-security market in China,
which represents their biggest growth potential since 9/11.
According to the congressional staff member, American companies
and their lobbyists are applying "enormous pressure to
open the floodgates."
The crackdown in Tibet has set off a wave of
righteous rallies and boycott calls. But it sidesteps the
uncomfortable fact that much of China's powerful surveillance
state is already being built with U.S. and European technology.
In February 2006, a congressional subcommittee held a hearing
on "The Internet in China: A Tool for Freedom or Suppression?"
Called on the carpet were Google (for building a special Chinese
search engine that blocked sensitive material), Cisco (for
supplying hardware for China's Great Firewall), Microsoft
(for taking down political blogs at the behest of Beijing)
and Yahoo (for complying with requests to hand over e-mail-account
information that led to the arrest and imprisonment of a high-profile
Chinese journalist, as well as a dissident who had criticized
corrupt officials in online discussion groups). The issue
came up again during the recent Tibet uproar when it was discovered
that both MSN and Yahoo had briefly put up the mug shots of
the "most wanted" Tibetan protesters on their Chinese
news portals.
In all of these cases, U.S. multinationals have
offered the same defense: Cooperating with draconian demands
to turn in customers and censor material is, unfortunately,
the price of doing business in China. Some, like Google, have
argued that despite having to limit access to the Internet,
they are contributing to an overall increase of freedom in
China. It's a story that glosses over the much larger scandal
of what is actually taking place: Western investors stampeding
into the country, possibly in violation of the law, with the
sole purpose of helping the Communist Party spend billions
of dollars building Police State 2.0. This isn't an unfortunate
cost of doing business in China: It's the goal of doing business
in China. "Come help us spy!" the Chinese government
has said to the world. And the world's leading technology
companies are eagerly answering the call.
As The New York Times recently reported, aiding
and abetting Beijing has become an investment boom for U.S.
companies. Honeywell is working with Chinese police to "set
up an elaborate computer monitoring system to analyze feeds
from indoor and outdoor cameras in one of Beijing's most populated
districts." General Electric is providing Beijing police
with a security system that controls "thousands of video
cameras simultaneously, and automatically alerts them to suspicious
or fast-moving objects, like people running." IBM, meanwhile,
is installing its "Smart Surveillance System" in
the capital, another system for linking video cameras and
scanning for trouble, while United Technologies is in Guangzhou,
helping to customize a "2,000-camera network in a single
large neighborhood, the first step toward a citywide network
of 250,000 cameras to be installed before the Asian Games
in 2010." By next year, the Chinese internal-security
market will be worth an estimated $33 billion — around
the same amount Congress has allocated for reconstructing
Iraq.
"We're at the start of a massive boom in
Chinese security spending," according to Graham Summers,
a market analyst who publishes an investor newsletter in Baltimore.
"And just as we need to be aware of how to profit from
the growth in China's commodity consumption, we need to be
aware of companies that will profit from 'security consumption.'
. . . There's big money to be made."
While U.S. companies are eager to break into
China's rapidly expanding market, every Chinese security firm
I come across in the Pearl River Delta is hatching some kind
of plan to break into the U.S. market. No one, however, is
quite as eager as Aebell Electrical Technology, one of China's
top 10 security companies. Aebell has a contract to help secure
the Olympic swimming stadium in Beijing and has installed
more than 10,000 cameras in and around Guangzhou. Business
has been growing by 100 percent a year. When I meet the company's
fidgety general manager, Zheng Sun Man, the first thing he
tells me is "We are going public at the end of this year.
On the Nasdaq." It also becomes clear why he has chosen
to speak with a foreign reporter: "Help, help, help!"
he begs me. "Help us promote our products!"
Zheng, an MBA from one of China's top schools,
proudly shows me the business card of the New York investment
bank that is handling Aebell's IPO, as well as a newly printed
English-language brochure showing off the company's security
cameras. Its pages are filled with American iconography, including
businessmen exchanging wads of dollar bills and several photos
of the New York skyline that prominently feature the World
Trade Center. In the hall at company headquarters is a poster
of two interlocking hearts: one depicting the American flag,
the other the Aebell logo.
I ask Zheng whether China's surveillance boom
has anything to do with the rise in strikes and demonstrations
in recent years. Zheng's deputy, a 23-year veteran of the
Chinese military wearing a black Mao suit, responds as if
I had launched a direct attack on the Communist Party itself.
"If you walk out of this building, you will be under
surveillance in five to six different ways," he says,
staring at me hard. He lets the implication of his words linger
in the air like an unspoken threat. "If you are a law-abiding
citizen, you shouldn't be afraid," he finally adds. "The
criminals are the only ones who should be afraid."
One of the first people to sound the alarm on
China's upgraded police state was a British researcher named
Greg Walton. In 2000, Walton was commissioned by the respected
human-rights organization Rights & Democracy to investigate
the ways in which Chinese security forces were harnessing
the tools of the Information Age to curtail free speech and
monitor political activists. The paper he produced was called
"China's Golden Shield: Corporations and the Development
of Surveillance Technology in the People's Republic of China."
It exposed how big-name tech companies like Nortel and Cisco
were helping the Chinese government to construct "a gigantic
online database with an all-encompassing surveillance network
— incorporating speech and face recognition, closed-circuit
television, smart cards, credit records and Internet surveillance
technologies."v When the paper was complete, Walton met
with the institute's staff to strategize about how to release
his explosive findings. "We thought this information
was going to shock the world," he recalls. In the midst
of their discussions, a colleague barged in and announced
that a plane had hit the Twin Towers. The meeting continued,
but they knew the context of their work had changed forever.
Walton's paper did have an impact, but not the
one he had hoped. The revelation that China was constructing
a gigantic digital database capable of watching its citizens
on the streets and online, listening to their phone calls
and tracking their consumer purchases sparked neither shock
nor outrage. Instead, Walton says, the paper was "mined
for ideas" by the U.S. government, as well as by private
companies hoping to grab a piece of the suddenly booming market
in spy tools. For Walton, the most chilling moment came when
the Defense Department tried to launch a system called Total
Information Awareness to build what it called a "virtual,
centralized grand database" that would create constantly
updated electronic dossiers on every citizen, drawing on banking,
credit-card, library and phone records, as well as footage
from surveillance cameras. "It was clearly similar to
what we were condemning China for," Walton says. Among
those aggressively vying to be part of this new security boom
was Joseph Atick, now an executive at L-1. The name he chose
for his plan to integrate facial-recognition software into
a vast security network was uncomfortably close to the surveillance
system being constructed in China: "Operation Noble Shield."
Empowered by the Patriot Act, many of the big
dreams hatched by men like Atick have already been put into
practice at home. New York, Chicago and Washington, D.C.,
are all experimenting with linking surveillance cameras into
a single citywide network. Police use of surveillance cameras
at peaceful demonstrations is now routine, and the images
collected can be mined for "face prints," then cross-checked
with ever-expanding photo databases. Although Total Information
Awareness was scrapped after the plans became public, large
pieces of the project continue, with private data-mining companies
collecting unprecedented amounts of information about everything
from Web browsing to car rentals, and selling it to the government.
Such efforts have provided China's rulers with
something even more valuable than surveillance technology
from Western democracies: the ability to claim that they are
just like us. Liu Zhengrong, a senior official dealing with
China's Internet policy, has defended Golden Shield and other
repressive measures by invoking the Patriot Act and the FBI's
massive e-mail-mining operations. "It is clear that any
country's legal authorities closely monitor the spread of
illegal information," he said. "We have noted that
the U.S. is doing a good job on this front." Lin Jiang
Huai, the head of China Information Security Technology, credits
America for giving him the idea to sell biometric IDs and
other surveillance tools to the Chinese police. "Bush
helped me get my vision," he has said. Similarly, when
challenged on the fact that dome cameras are appearing three
to a block in Shenzhen and Guangzhou, Chinese companies respond
that their model is not the East German Stasi but modern-day
London.
Human-rights activists are quick to point out
that while the tools are the same, the political contexts
are radically different. China has a government that uses
its high-tech web to imprison and torture peaceful protesters,
Tibetan monks and independent-minded journalists. Yet even
here, the lines are getting awfully blurry. The U.S. currently
has more people behind bars than China, despite a population
less than a quarter of its size. And Sharon Hom, executive
director of the advocacy group Human Rights in China, says
that when she talks about China's horrific human-rights record
at international gatherings, "There are two words that
I hear in response again and again: Guantánamo Bay."
The Fourth Amendment prohibition against illegal
search and seizure made it into the U.S. Constitution precisely
because its drafters understood that the power to snoop is
addictive. Even if we happen to trust in the good intentions
of the snoopers, the nature of any government can change rapidly
— which is why the Constitution places limits on the
tools available to any regime. But the drafters could never
have imagined the commercial pressures at play today. The
global homeland-security business is now worth an estimated
$200 billion — more than Hollywood and the music industry
combined. Any sector of that size inevitably takes on its
own momentum. New markets must be found — which, in
the Big Brother business, means an endless procession of new
enemies and new emergencies: crime, immigration, terrorism.
In Shenzhen one night, I have dinner with a
U.S. business consultant named Stephen Herrington. Before
he started lecturing at Chinese business schools, teaching
students concepts like brand management, Herrington was a
military-intelligence officer, ascending to the rank of lieutenant
colonel. What he is seeing in the Pearl River Delta, he tells
me, is scaring the hell out of him — and not for what
it means to China.
"I can guarantee you that there are people
in the Bush administration who are studying the use of surveillance
technologies being developed here and have at least skeletal
plans to implement them at home," he says. "We can
already see it in New York with CCTV cameras. Once you have
the cameras in place, you have the infrastructure for a powerful
tracking system. I'm worried about what this will mean if
the U.S. government goes totalitarian and starts employing
these technologies more than they are already. I'm worried
about the threat this poses to American democracy."
Herrington pauses. "George W. Bush,"
he adds, "would do what they are doing here in a heartbeat
if he could."
China-bashing never fails to soothe the Western
conscience — here is a large and powerful country that,
when it comes to human rights and democracy, is so much worse
than Bush's America. But during my time in Shenzhen, China's
youngest and most modern city, I often have the feeling that
I am witnessing not some rogue police state but a global middle
ground, the place where more and more countries are converging.
China is becoming more like us in very visible ways (Starbucks,
Hooters, cellphones that are cooler than ours), and we are
becoming more like China in less visible ones (torture, warrantless
wiretapping, indefinite detention, though not nearly on the
Chinese scale).
What is most disconcerting about China's surveillance
state is how familiar it all feels. When I check into the
Sheraton in Shenzhen, for instance, it looks like any other
high-end hotel chain — only the lobby is a little more
modern and the cheerful clerk doesn't just check my passport
but takes a scan of it.
"Are you making a copy?" I ask.
"No, no," he responds helpfully. "We're
just sending a copy to the police."
Up in my room, the Website that pops up on my
laptop looks like every other Net portal at a hotel —
only it won't let me access human-rights and labor Websites
that I know are working fine. The TV gets CNN International
— only with strange edits and obviously censored blackouts.
My cellphone picks up a strong signal for the China Mobile
network. A few months earlier, in Davos, Switzerland, the
CEO of China Mobile bragged to a crowd of communications executives
that "we not only know who you are, we also know where
you are." Asked about customer privacy, he replied that
his company only gives "this kind of data to government
authorities" — pretty much the same answer I got
from the clerk at the front desk.
When I leave China, I feel a powerful relief:
I have escaped. I am home safe. But the feeling starts to
fade as soon as I get to the customs line at JFK, watching
hundreds of visitors line up to have their pictures taken
and fingers scanned. In the terminal, someone hands me a brochure
for "Fly Clear." All I need to do is have my fingerprints
and irises scanned, and I can get a Clear card with a biometric
chip that will let me sail through security.
Later, I look it up: The company providing the
technology is L-1.
(Send Comments to politicsparty@gmail.com OR Send SMS to
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(Send Comments
to politicsparty@gmail.com OR
SMS to 9958976000)

|
|
| CHINA
BUILDS HI-TECH POLICE STATE. READY FOR EXPORT. |
| WILL
ADVANI ALLOW KARAT TO IMPORT “POLICE-STATE”
TO INDIA? |
|
| CHINA’S
ALL SEEING EYE |
| By
NAOMI KLIEN |
| 17
JULY 2008 |
|
| |
| |
| With
the help of U.S. defense contractors, China is building the
prototype for a high-tech police state. It is ready for export.
Thirty years ago, the city of Shenzhen didn't
exist.
Back in those days, it was a string of small
fishing villages and collectively run rice paddies, a place
of rutted dirt roads and traditional temples. That was before
the Communist Party chose it — thanks to its location
close to Hong Kong's port — to be China's first "special
economic zone," one of only four areas where capitalism
would be permitted on a trial basis.
The theory behind the experiment was that the
"real" China would keep its socialist soul intact
while profiting from the private-sector jobs and industrial
development created in Shenzhen. The result was a city of
pure commerce, undiluted by history or rooted culture —
the crack cocaine of capitalism. It was a force so addictive
to investors that the Shenzhen experiment quickly expanded,
swallowing not just the surrounding Pearl River Delta, which
now houses roughly 100,000 factories, but much of the rest
of the country as well.
Today, Shenzhen is a city of 12.4 million people,
and there is a good chance that at least half of everything
you own was made here: iPods, laptops, sneakers, flatscreen
TVs, cellphones, jeans, maybe your desk chair, possibly your
car and almost certainly your printer.
Hundreds of luxury condominiums tower over the
city; many are more than 40 stories high, topped with three-story
penthouses. Newer neighborhoods like Keji Yuan are packed
with ostentatiously modern corporate campuses and decadent
shopping malls. Rem Koolhaas, Prada's favorite architect,
is building a stock exchange in Shenzhen that looks like it
floats — a design intended, he says, to "suggest
and illustrate the process of the market." A still-under-construction
superlight subway will soon connect it all at high speed;
every car has multiple TV screens broadcasting over a Wi-Fi
network. At night, the entire city lights up like a pimped-out
Hummer, with each five-star hotel and office tower competing
over who can put on the best light show.
Many of the big American players have set up
shop in Shenzhen, but they look singularly unimpressive next
to their Chinese competitors. The research complex for China's
telecom giant Huawei, for instance, is so large that it has
its own highway exit, while its workers ride home on their
own bus line. Pressed up against Shenzhen's disco shopping
centers, Wal-Mart superstores — of which there are nine
in the city — look like dreary corner stores. (China
almost seems to be mocking us: "You call that a superstore?")
McDonald's and KFC appear every few blocks, but they seem
almost retro next to the Real Kung Fu fast-food chain, whose
mascot is a stylized Bruce Lee.
American commentators like CNN's Jack Cafferty
dismiss the Chinese as "the same bunch of goons and thugs
they've been for the last 50 years." But nobody told
the people of Shenzhen, who are busily putting on a 24-hour-a-day
show called "America" — a pirated version
of the original, only with flashier design, higher profits
and less complaining. This has not happened by accident. China
today, epitomized by Shenzhen's transition from mud to megacity
in 30 years, represents a new way to organize society. Sometimes
called "market Stalinism," it is a potent hybrid
of the most powerful political tools of authoritarian communism
— central planning, merciless repression, constant surveillance
— harnessed to advance the goals of global capitalism.
Now, as China prepares to showcase its economic
advances during the upcoming Olympics in Beijing, Shenzhen
is once again serving as a laboratory, a testing ground for
the next phase of this vast social experiment. Over the past
two years, some 200,000 surveillance cameras have been installed
throughout the city. Many are in public spaces, disguised
as lampposts. The closed-circuit TV cameras will soon be connected
to a single, nationwide network, an all-seeing system that
will be capable of tracking and identifying anyone who comes
within its range — a project driven in part by U.S.
technology and investment. Over the next three years, Chinese
security executives predict they will install as many as 2
million CCTVs in Shenzhen, which would make it the most watched
city in the world. (Security-crazy London boasts only half
a million surveillance cameras.)
The security cameras are just one part of a
much broader high-tech surveillance and censorship program
known in China as "Golden Shield." The end goal
is to use the latest people-tracking technology — thoughtfully
supplied by American giants like IBM, Honeywell and General
Electric — to create an airtight consumer cocoon: a
place where Visa cards, Adidas sneakers, China Mobile cellphones,
McDonald's Happy Meals, Tsingtao beer and UPS delivery (to
name just a few of the official sponsors of the Beijing Olympics)
can be enjoyed under the unblinking eye of the state, without
the threat of democracy breaking out. With political unrest
on the rise across China, the government hopes to use the
surveillance shield to identify and counteract dissent before
it explodes into a mass movement like the one that grabbed
the world's attention at Tiananmen Square.
Remember how we've always been told that free
markets and free people go hand in hand? That was a lie. It
turns out that the most efficient delivery system for capitalism
is actually a communist-style police state, fortressed with
American "homeland security" technologies, pumped
up with "war on terror" rhetoric. And the global
corporations currently earning superprofits from this social
experiment are unlikely to be content if the lucrative new
market remains confined to cities such as Shenzhen. Like everything
else assembled in China with American parts, Police State
2.0 is ready for export to a neighborhood near you.
Zhang Yi points to an empty bracket on the dashboard
of his black Honda. "It used to hold my GPS, but I leave
it at home now," he says. "It's the crime —
they are too easy to steal." He quickly adds, "Since
the surveillance cameras came in, we have seen a very dramatic
decrease in crime in Shenzhen."
After driving for an hour past hundreds of factory
gates and industrial parks, we pull up to a salmon-color building
that Zhang partly owns. This is the headquarters of FSAN:
CCTV System. Zhang, a prototypical Shenzhen yuppie in a royal-blue
button-down shirt and black-rimmed glasses, apologizes for
the mess. Inside, every inch of space is lined with cardboard
boxes filled with electronics parts and finished products.
Zhang opened the factory two and a half years
ago, and his investment has already paid off tenfold. That
kind of growth isn't unusual in the field he has chosen: Zhang's
factory makes digital surveillance cameras, turning out 400,000
a year. Half of the cameras are shipped overseas, destined
to peer from building ledges in London, Manhattan and Dubai
as part of the global boom in "homeland security."
The other half stays in China, many right here in Shenzhen
and in neighboring Guangzhou, another megacity of 12 million
people. China's market for surveillance cameras enjoyed revenues
of $4.1 billion last year, a jump of 24 percent from 2006.
Zhang escorts me to the assembly line, where
rows of young workers, most of them women, are bent over semiconductors,
circuit boards, tiny cables and bulbs. At the end of each
line is "quality control," which consists of plugging
the camera into a monitor and making sure that it records.
We enter a showroom where Zhang and his colleagues meet with
clients. The walls are lined with dozens of camera models:
domes of all sizes, specializing in day and night, wet and
dry, camouflaged to look like lights, camouflaged to look
like smoke detectors, explosion-proof, the size of a soccer
ball, the size of a ring box.
The workers at FSAN don't just make surveillance
cameras; they are constantly watched by them. While they work,
the silent eyes of rotating lenses capture their every move.
When they leave work and board buses, they are filmed again.
When they walk to their dormitories, the streets are lined
with what look like newly installed streetlamps, their white
poles curving toward the sidewalk with black domes at the
ends. Inside the domes are high-resolution cameras, the same
kind the workers produce at FSAN. Some blocks have three or
four, one every few yards. One Shenzhen-based company, China
Security & Surveillance Technology, has developed software
to enable the cameras to alert police when an unusual number
of people begin to gather at any given location.
In 2006, the Chinese government mandated that
all Internet cafes (as well as restaurants and other "entertainment"
venues) install video cameras with direct feeds to their local
police stations. Part of a wider surveillance project known
as "Safe Cities," the effort now encompasses 660
municipalities in China. It is the most ambitious new government
program in the Pearl River Delta, and supplying it is one
of the fastest-growing new markets in Shenzhen.
But the cameras that Zhang manufactures are
only part of the massive experiment in population control
that is under way here. "The big picture," Zhang
tells me in his office at the factory, "is integration."
That means linking cameras with other forms of surveillance:
the Internet, phones, facial-recognition software and GPS
monitoring.
This is how this Golden Shield will work: Chinese
citizens will be watched around the clock through networked
CCTV cameras and remote monitoring of computers. They will
be listened to on their phone calls, monitored by digital
voice-recognition technologies. Their Internet access will
be aggressively limited through the country's notorious system
of online controls known as the "Great Firewall."
Their movements will be tracked through national ID cards
with scannable computer chips and photos that are instantly
uploaded to police databases and linked to their holder's
personal data. This is the most important element of all:
linking all these tools together in a massive, searchable
database of names, photos, residency information, work history
and biometric data. When Golden Shield is finished, there
will be a photo in those databases for every person in China:
1.3 billion faces.
Shenzhen is the place where the shield has received
its most extensive fortifications — the place where
all the spy toys are being hooked together and tested to see
what they can do. "The central government eventually
wants to have city-by-city surveillance, so they could just
sit and monitor one city and its surveillance system as a
whole," Zhang says. "It's all part of that bigger
project. Once the tests are done and it's proven, they will
be spreading from the big province to the cities, even to
the rural farmland."
In fact, the rollout of the high-tech shield
is already well under way.
When the Tibetan capital of Lhasa was set alight
in March, the world caught a glimpse of the rage that lies
just under the surface in many parts of China. And though
the Lhasa riots stood out for their ethnic focus and their
intensity, protests across China are often shockingly militant.
In July 2006, workers at a factory near Shenzhen expressed
their displeasure over paltry pay by overturning cars, smashing
computers and opening fire hydrants. In March of last year,
when bus fares went up in the rural town of Zhushan, 20,000
people took to the streets and five police vehicles were torched.
Indeed, China has seen levels of political unrest in recent
years unknown since 1989, the year student protests were crushed
with tanks in Tiananmen Square. In 2005, by the government's
own measure, there were at least 87,000 "mass incidents"
— governmentspeak for large-scale protests or riots.
This increased unrest — a process aided
by access to cellphones and the Internet — represents
more than a security problem for the leaders in Beijing. It
threatens their whole model of command-and-control capitalism.
China's rapid economic growth has relied on the ability of
its rulers to raze villages and move mountains to make way
for the latest factory towns and shopping malls. If the people
living on those mountains use blogs and text messaging to
launch a mountain-people's-rights uprising with each new project,
and if they link up with similar uprisings in other parts
of the country, China's dizzying expansion could grind to
a halt.
At the same time, the success of China's ravenous
development creates its own challenges. Every rural village
that is successfully razed to make way for a new project creates
more displaced people who join the ranks of the roughly 130
million migrants roaming the country looking for work. By
2025, it is projected that this "floating" population
will swell to more than 350 million. Many will end up in cities
like Shenzhen, which is already home to 7 million migrant
laborers.
But while China's cities need these displaced
laborers to work in factories and on construction sites, they
are unwilling to offer them the same benefits as permanent
residents: highly subsidized education and health care, as
well as other public services. While migrants can live for
decades in big cities like Shenzhen and Guangzhou, their residency
remains fixed to the rural community where they were born,
a fact encoded on their national ID cards. As one young migrant
in Guangzhou put it to me, "The local people want to
make money from migrant workers, but they don't want to give
them rights. But why are the local people so rich? Because
of the migrant workers!"
With its militant protests and mobile population,
China confronts a fundamental challenge. How can it maintain
a system based on two dramatically unequal categories of people:
the winners, who get the condos and cars, and the losers,
who do the heavy labor and are denied those benefits? More
urgently, how can it do this when information technology threatens
to link the losers together into a movement so large it could
easily overwhelm the country's elites?
The answer is Golden Shield.
When Tibet erupted in protests recently, the
surveillance system was thrown into its first live test, with
every supposedly liberating tool of the Information Age —
cellphones, satellite television, the Internet — transformed
into a method of repression and control. As soon as the protests
gathered steam, China reinforced its Great Firewall, blocking
its citizens from accessing dozens of foreign news outlets.
In some parts of Tibet, Internet access was shut down altogether.
Many people trying to phone friends and family found that
their calls were blocked, and cellphones in Lhasa were blitzed
with text messages from the police: "Severely battle
any creation or any spreading of rumors that would upset or
frighten people or cause social disorder or illegal criminal
behavior that could damage social stability."
During the first week of protests, foreign journalists
who tried to get into Tibet were systematically turned back.
But that didn't mean that there were no cameras inside the
besieged areas. Since early last year, activists in Lhasa
have been reporting on the proliferation of black-domed cameras
that look like streetlights — just like the ones I saw
coming off the assembly line in Shenzhen. Tibetan monks complain
that cameras — activated by motion sensors — have
invaded their monasteries and prayer rooms.
During the Lhasa riots, police on the scene
augmented the footage from the CCTVs with their own video
cameras, choosing to film — rather than stop —
the violence, which left 19 dead. The police then quickly
cut together the surveillance shots that made the Tibetans
look most vicious — beating Chinese bystanders, torching
shops, ripping metal sheeting off banks — and created
a kind of copumentary: Tibetans Gone Wild. These weren't the
celestial beings in flowing robes the Beastie Boys and Richard
Gere had told us about. They were angry young men, wielding
sticks and long knives. They looked ugly, brutal, tribal.
On Chinese state TV, this footage played around the clock.
The police also used the surveillance footage
to extract mug shots of the demonstrators and rioters. Photos
of the 21 "most wanted" Tibetans, many taken from
that distinctive "streetlamp" view of the domed
cameras, were immediately circulated to all of China's major
news portals, which obediently posted them to help out with
the manhunt. The Internet became the most powerful police
tool. Within days, several of the men on the posters were
in custody, along with hundreds of others.
The flare-up in Tibet, weeks before the Olympic
torch began its global journey, has been described repeatedly
in the international press as a "nightmare" for
Beijing. Several foreign leaders have pledged to boycott the
opening ceremonies of the games, the press has hosted an orgy
of China-bashing, and the torch became a magnet for protesters,
with anti-China banners dropped from the Eiffel Tower and
the Golden Gate Bridge. But inside China, the Tibet debacle
may actually have been a boon to the party, strengthening
its grip on power. Despite its citizens having unprecedented
access to information technology (there are as many Internet
users in China as there are in the U.S.), the party demonstrated
that it could still control what they hear and see. And what
they saw on their TVs and computer screens were violent Tibetans,
out to kill their Chinese neighbors, while police showed admirable
restraint. Tibetan solidarity groups say 140 people were killed
in the crackdown that followed the protests, but without pictures
taken by journalists, it is as if those subsequent deaths
didn't happen.
Chinese viewers also saw a world unsympathetic
to the Chinese victims of Tibetan violence, so hostile to
their country that it used a national tragedy to try to rob
them of their hard-won Olympic glory. These nationalist sentiments
freed up Beijing to go on a full-fledged witch hunt. In the
name of fighting a war on terror, security forces rounded
up thousands of Tibetan activists and supporters. The end
result is that when the games begin, much of the Tibetan movement
will be safely behind bars — along with scores of Chinese
journalists, bloggers and human-rights defenders who have
also been trapped in the government's high-tech web.
Police State 2.0 might not look good from the
outside, but on the inside, it appears to have passed its
first major test.
In Guangzhou, an hour and a half by train from
Shenzhen, Yao Ruoguang is preparing for a major test of his
own. "It's called the 10-million-faces test," he
tells me.
Yao is managing director of Pixel Solutions,
a Chinese company that specializes in producing the new high-tech
national ID cards, as well as selling facial-recognition software
to businesses and government agencies. The test, the first
phase of which is only weeks away, is being staged by the
Ministry of Public Security in Beijing. The idea is to measure
the effectiveness of face-recognition software in identifying
police suspects. Participants will be given a series of photos,
taken in a variety of situations. Their task will be to match
the images to other photos of the same people in the government's
massive database. Several biometrics companies, including
Yao's, have been invited to compete. "We have to be able
to match a face in a 10 million database in one second,"
Yao tells me. "We are preparing for that now."
The companies that score well will be first
in line for lucrative government contracts to integrate face-recognition
software into Golden Shield, using it to check for ID fraud
and to discover the identities of suspects caught on surveillance
cameras. Yao says the technology is almost there: "It
will happen next year."
When I meet Yao at his corporate headquarters,
he is feeling confident about how his company will perform
in the test. His secret weapon is that he will be using facial-recognition
software purchased from L-1 Identity Solutions, a major U.S.
defense contractor that produces passports and biometric security
systems for the U.S. government.
To show how well it works, Yao demonstrates
on himself. Using a camera attached to his laptop, he snaps
a picture of his own face, round and boyish for its 54 years.
Then he uploads it onto the company's proprietary Website,
built with L-1 software. With the cursor, he marks his own
eyes with two green plus signs, helping the system to measure
the distance between his features, a distinctive aspect of
our faces that does not change with disguises or even surgery.
The first step is to "capture the image," Yao explains.
Next is "finding the face."
He presses APPLY, telling the program to match
the new face with photos of the same person in the company's
database of 600,000 faces. Instantly, multiple photos of Yao
appear, including one taken 19 years earlier — proof
that the technology can "find a face" even when
the face has changed significantly with time."
It took 1.1 milliseconds!" Yao exclaims.
"Yeah, that's me!"
In nearby cubicles, teams of Yao's programmers
and engineers take each other's pictures, mark their eyes
with green plus signs and test the speed of their search engines.
"Everyone is preparing for the test," Yao explains.
"If we pass, if we come out number one, we are guaranteed
a market in China."
Every couple of minutes Yao's phone beeps. Sometimes
it's a work message, but most of the time it's a text from
his credit-card company, informing him that his daughter,
who lives in Australia, has just made another charge. "Every
time the text message comes, I know my daughter is spending
money!" He shrugs: "She likes designers."
Like many other security executives I interviewed
in China, Yao denies that a primary use of the technology
he is selling is to hunt down political activists. "Ninety-five
percent," he insists, "is just for regular safety."
He has, he admits, been visited by government spies, whom
he describes as "the internal-security people."
They came with grainy pictures, shot from far away or through
keyhole cameras, of "some protesters, some dissidents."
They wanted to know if Yao's facial-recognition software could
help identify the people in the photos. Yao was sorry to disappoint
them. "Honestly, the technology so far still can't meet
their needs," he says. "The photos that they show
us were just too blurry." That is rapidly changing, of
course, thanks to the spread of high-resolution CCTVs. Yet
Yao insists that the government's goal is not repression:
"If you're a [political] organizer, they want to know
your motive," he says. "So they take the picture,
give the photo, so at least they can find out who that person
is."
Until recently, Yao's photography empire was
focused on consumers — taking class photos at schools,
launching a Chinese knockoff of Flickr (the original is often
blocked by the Great Firewall), turning photos of chubby two-year-olds
into fridge magnets and lampshades. He still maintains those
businesses, which means that half of the offices at Pixel
Solutions look like they have just hosted a kid's birthday
party. The other half looks like an ominous customs office,
the walls lined with posters of terrorists in the cross hairs:
FACE MATCH, FACE PASS, FACE WATCH. When Beijing started sinking
more and more of the national budget into surveillance technologies,
Yao saw an opportunity that would make all his previous ventures
look small. Between more powerful computers, higher-resolution
cameras and a global obsession with crime and terrorism, he
figured that face recognition "should be the next dot-com."
Not a computer scientist himself — he
studied English literature in school — Yao began researching
corporate leaders in the field. He learned that face recognition
is highly controversial, with a track record of making wrong
IDs. A few companies, however, were scoring much higher in
controlled tests in the U.S. One of them was a company soon
to be renamed L-1 Identity Solutions. Based in Connecticut,
L-1 was created two years ago out of the mergers and buyouts
of half a dozen major players in the biometrics field, all
of which specialized in the science of identifying people
through distinct physical traits: fingerprints, irises, face
geometry. The mergers made L-1 a one-stop shop for biometrics.
Thanks to board members like former CIA director George Tenet,
the company rapidly became a homeland-security heavy hitter.
L-1 projects its annual revenues will hit $1 billion by 2011,
much of it from U.S. government contracts.
In 2006, Yao tells me, "I made the first
phone call and sent the first e-mail." For a flat fee
of $20,000, he gained access to the company's proprietary
software, allowing him to "build a lot of development
software based on L-1's technology." Since then, L-1's
partnership with Yao has gone far beyond that token investment.
Yao says it isn't really his own company that is competing
in the upcoming 10-million-faces test being staged by the
Chinese government: "We'll be involved on behalf of L-1
in China." Yao adds that he communicates regularly with
L1 and has visited the company's research headquarters in
New Jersey. ("Out the window you can see the Statue of
Liberty. It's such a historic place.") L1 is watching
his test preparations with great interest, Yao says. "It
seemed that they were more excited than us when we tell them
the results."
L-1's enthusiasm is hardly surprising: If Yao
impresses the Ministry of Public Security with the company's
ability to identify criminals, L-1 will have cracked the largest
potential market for biometrics in the world. But here's the
catch: As proud as Yao is to be L-1's Chinese licensee, L-1
appears to be distinctly less proud of its association with
Yao. On its Website and in its reports to investors, L-1 boasts
of contracts and negotiations with governments from Panama
and Saudi Arabia to Mexico and Turkey. China, however, is
conspicuously absent. And though CEO Bob LaPenta makes reference
to "some large international opportunities," not
once does he mention Pixel Solutions in Guangzhou.
After leaving a message with the company inquiring
about L-1's involvement in China's homeland-security market,
I get a call back from Doni Fordyce, vice president of corporate
communications. She has consulted Joseph Atick, the company's
head of research. "We have nothing in China," she
tells me. "Nothing, absolutely nothing. We are uninvolved.
We really don't have any relationships at all."
I tell Fordyce about Yao, the 10-million test,
the money he paid for the software license. She'll call me
right back. When she does, 20 minutes later, it is with this
news: "Absolutely, we've sold testing SDKs [software
development kits] to Pixel Solutions and to others [in China]
that may be entering a test." Yao's use of the technology,
she said, is "within his license" purchased from
L-1.
The company's reticence to publicize its activities
in China could have something to do with the fact that the
relationship between Yao and L-1 may well be illegal under
U.S. law. After the Chinese government sent tanks into Tiananmen
Square in 1989, Congress passed legislation barring U.S. companies
from selling any products in China that have to do with "crime
control or detection instruments or equipment." That
means not only guns but everything from police batons and
handcuffs to ink and powder for taking fingerprints, and software
for storing them. Interestingly, one of the "detection
instruments" that prompted the legislation was the surveillance
camera. Beijing had installed several clunky cameras around
Tiananmen Square, originally meant to monitor traffic flows.
Those lenses were ultimately used to identify and arrest key
pro-democracy dissidents.
"The intent of that act," a congressional
staff member with considerable China experience tells me,
"was to keep U.S. companies out of the business of helping
the Chinese police conduct their business, which might ultimately
end up as it did in 1989 in the suppression of human rights
and democracy in China."
Pixel's application of L-1 facial-recognition
software seems to fly in the face of the ban's intent. By
his own admission, Yao is already getting visits from Chinese
state spies anxious to use facial recognition to identify
dissidents. And as part of the 10-million-faces test, Yao
has been working intimately with Chinese national-security
forces, syncing L-1's software to their vast database, a process
that took a week of intensive work in Beijing. During that
time, Yao says, he was on the phone "every day"
with L-1, getting its help adapting the technology. "Because
we are representing them," he says. "We took the
test on their behalf."
In other words, this controversial U.S. "crime
control" technology has already found its way into the
hands of the Chinese police. Moreover, Yao's goal, stated
to me several times, is to use the software to land lucrative
contracts with police agencies to integrate facial recognition
into the newly built system of omnipresent surveillance cameras
and high-tech national ID cards. As part of any contract he
gets, Yao says, he will "pay L-1 a certain percentage
of our sales."
When I put the L-1 scenario to the Commerce
Department's Bureau of Industry and Security — the division
charged with enforcing the post-Tiananmen export controls
— a representative says that software kits are subject
to the sanctions if "they are exported from the U.S.
or are the foreign direct product of a U.S.-origin item."
Based on both criteria, the software kit sold to Yao seems
to fall within the ban.
When I ask Doni Fordyce at L-1 about the embargo,
she tells me, "I don't know anything about that."
Asked whether she would like to find out about it and call
me back, she replies, "I really don't want to comment,
so there is no comment." Then she hangs up.
You have probably never heard of L-1, but there
is every chance that it has heard of you. Few companies have
collected as much sensitive information about U.S. citizens
and visitors to America as L-1: It boasts a database of 60
million records, and it "captures" more than a million
new fingerprints every year. Here is a small sample of what
the company does: produces passports and passport cards for
American citizens; takes finger scans of visitors to the U.S.
under the Department of Homeland Security's massive U.S.-Visit
program; equips U.S. soldiers in Iraq and Afghanistan with
"mobile iris and multimodal devices" so they can
collect biometric data in the field; maintains the State Department's
"largest facial-recognition database system"; and
produces driver's licenses in Illinois, Montana and North
Carolina. In addition, L-1 has an even more secretive intelligence
unit called SpecTal. Asked by a Wall Street analyst to discuss,
in "extremely general" terms, what the division
was doing with contracts worth roughly $100 million, the company's
CEO would only say, "Stay tuned."
It is L-1's deep integration with multiple U.S.
government agencies that makes its dealings in China so interesting:
It isn't just L-1 that is potentially helping the Chinese
police to nab political dissidents, it's U.S. taxpayers. The
technology that Yao purchased for just a few thousand dollars
is the result of Defense Department research grants and contracts
going as far back as 1994, when a young academic named Joseph
Atick (the research director Fordyce consulted on L-1's China
dealings) taught a computer at Rockefeller University to recognize
his face.
Yao, for his part, knows all about the U.S.
export controls on police equipment to China. He tells me
that L-1's electronic fingerprinting tools are "banned
from entering China" due to U.S. concerns that they will
be used to "catch the political criminals, you know,
the dissidents, more easily." He thinks he and L-1 have
found a legal loophole, however. While fingerprinting technology
appears on the Commerce Department's list of banned products,
there is no explicit mention of "face prints" —
likely because the idea was still in the realm of science
fiction when the Tiananmen Square massacre took place. As
far as Yao is concerned, that omission means that L-1 can
legally supply its facial-recognition software for use by
the Chinese government.
Whatever the legality of L-1's participation
in Chinese surveillance, it is clear that U.S. companies are
determined to break into the homeland-security market in China,
which represents their biggest growth potential since 9/11.
According to the congressional staff member, American companies
and their lobbyists are applying "enormous pressure to
open the floodgates."
The crackdown in Tibet has set off a wave of
righteous rallies and boycott calls. But it sidesteps the
uncomfortable fact that much of China's powerful surveillance
state is already being built with U.S. and European technology.
In February 2006, a congressional subcommittee held a hearing
on "The Internet in China: A Tool for Freedom or Suppression?"
Called on the carpet were Google (for building a special Chinese
search engine that blocked sensitive material), Cisco (for
supplying hardware for China's Great Firewall), Microsoft
(for taking down political blogs at the behest of Beijing)
and Yahoo (for complying with requests to hand over e-mail-account
information that led to the arrest and imprisonment of a high-profile
Chinese journalist, as well as a dissident who had criticized
corrupt officials in online discussion groups). The issue
came up again during the recent Tibet uproar when it was discovered
that both MSN and Yahoo had briefly put up the mug shots of
the "most wanted" Tibetan protesters on their Chinese
news portals.
In all of these cases, U.S. multinationals have
offered the same defense: Cooperating with draconian demands
to turn in customers and censor material is, unfortunately,
the price of doing business in China. Some, like Google, have
argued that despite having to limit access to the Internet,
they are contributing to an overall increase of freedom in
China. It's a story that glosses over the much larger scandal
of what is actually taking place: Western investors stampeding
into the country, possibly in violation of the law, with the
sole purpose of helping the Communist Party spend billions
of dollars building Police State 2.0. This isn't an unfortunate
cost of doing business in China: It's the goal of doing business
in China. "Come help us spy!" the Chinese government
has said to the world. And the world's leading technology
companies are eagerly answering the call.
As The New York Times recently reported, aiding
and abetting Beijing has become an investment boom for U.S.
companies. Honeywell is working with Chinese police to "set
up an elaborate computer monitoring system to analyze feeds
from indoor and outdoor cameras in one of Beijing's most populated
districts." General Electric is providing Beijing police
with a security system that controls "thousands of video
cameras simultaneously, and automatically alerts them to suspicious
or fast-moving objects, like people running." IBM, meanwhile,
is installing its "Smart Surveillance System" in
the capital, another system for linking video cameras and
scanning for trouble, while United Technologies is in Guangzhou,
helping to customize a "2,000-camera network in a single
large neighborhood, the first step toward a citywide network
of 250,000 cameras to be installed before the Asian Games
in 2010." By next year, the Chinese internal-security
market will be worth an estimated $33 billion — around
the same amount Congress has allocated for reconstructing
Iraq.
"We're at the start of a massive boom in
Chinese security spending," according to Graham Summers,
a market analyst who publishes an investor newsletter in Baltimore.
"And just as we need to be aware of how to profit from
the growth in China's commodity consumption, we need to be
aware of companies that will profit from 'security consumption.'
. . . There's big money to be made."
While U.S. companies are eager to break into
China's rapidly expanding market, every Chinese security firm
I come across in the Pearl River Delta is hatching some kind
of plan to break into the U.S. market. No one, however, is
quite as eager as Aebell Electrical Technology, one of China's
top 10 security companies. Aebell has a contract to help secure
the Olympic swimming stadium in Beijing and has installed
more than 10,000 cameras in and around Guangzhou. Business
has been growing by 100 percent a year. When I meet the company's
fidgety general manager, Zheng Sun Man, the first thing he
tells me is "We are going public at the end of this year.
On the Nasdaq." It also becomes clear why he has chosen
to speak with a foreign reporter: "Help, help, help!"
he begs me. "Help us promote our products!"
Zheng, an MBA from one of China's top schools,
proudly shows me the business card of the New York investment
bank that is handling Aebell's IPO, as well as a newly printed
English-language brochure showing off the company's security
cameras. Its pages are filled with American iconography, including
businessmen exchanging wads of dollar bills and several photos
of the New York skyline that prominently feature the World
Trade Center. In the hall at company headquarters is a poster
of two interlocking hearts: one depicting the American flag,
the other the Aebell logo.
I ask Zheng whether China's surveillance boom
has anything to do with the rise in strikes and demonstrations
in recent years. Zheng's deputy, a 23-year veteran of the
Chinese military wearing a black Mao suit, responds as if
I had launched a direct attack on the Communist Party itself.
"If you walk out of this building, you will be under
surveillance in five to six different ways," he says,
staring at me hard. He lets the implication of his words linger
in the air like an unspoken threat. "If you are a law-abiding
citizen, you shouldn't be afraid," he finally adds. "The
criminals are the only ones who should be afraid."
One of the first people to sound the alarm on
China's upgraded police state was a British researcher named
Greg Walton. In 2000, Walton was commissioned by the respected
human-rights organization Rights & Democracy to investigate
the ways in which Chinese security forces were harnessing
the tools of the Information Age to curtail free speech and
monitor political activists. The paper he produced was called
"China's Golden Shield: Corporations and the Development
of Surveillance Technology in the People's Republic of China."
It exposed how big-name tech companies like Nortel and Cisco
were helping the Chinese government to construct "a gigantic
online database with an all-encompassing surveillance network
— incorporating speech and face recognition, closed-circuit
television, smart cards, credit records and Internet surveillance
technologies."v When the paper was complete, Walton met
with the institute's staff to strategize about how to release
his explosive findings. "We thought this information
was going to shock the world," he recalls. In the midst
of their discussions, a colleague barged in and announced
that a plane had hit the Twin Towers. The meeting continued,
but they knew the context of their work had changed forever.
Walton's paper did have an impact, but not the
one he had hoped. The revelation that China was constructing
a gigantic digital database capable of watching its citizens
on the streets and online, listening to their phone calls
and tracking their consumer purchases sparked neither shock
nor outrage. Instead, Walton says, the paper was "mined
for ideas" by the U.S. government, as well as by private
companies hoping to grab a piece of the suddenly booming market
in spy tools. For Walton, the most chilling moment came when
the Defense Department tried to launch a system called Total
Information Awareness to build what it called a "virtual,
centralized grand database" that would create constantly
updated electronic dossiers on every citizen, drawing on banking,
credit-card, library and phone records, as well as footage
from surveillance cameras. "It was clearly similar to
what we were condemning China for," Walton says. Among
those aggressively vying to be part of this new security boom
was Joseph Atick, now an executive at L-1. The name he chose
for his plan to integrate facial-recognition software into
a vast security network was uncomfortably close to the surveillance
system being constructed in China: "Operation Noble Shield."
Empowered by the Patriot Act, many of the big
dreams hatched by men like Atick have already been put into
practice at home. New York, Chicago and Washington, D.C.,
are all experimenting with linking surveillance cameras into
a single citywide network. Police use of surveillance cameras
at peaceful demonstrations is now routine, and the images
collected can be mined for "face prints," then cross-checked
with ever-expanding photo databases. Although Total Information
Awareness was scrapped after the plans became public, large
pieces of the project continue, with private data-mining companies
collecting unprecedented amounts of information about everything
from Web browsing to car rentals, and selling it to the government.
Such efforts have provided China's rulers with
something even more valuable than surveillance technology
from Western democracies: the ability to claim that they are
just like us. Liu Zhengrong, a senior official dealing with
China's Internet policy, has defended Golden Shield and other
repressive measures by invoking the Patriot Act and the FBI's
massive e-mail-mining operations. "It is clear that any
country's legal authorities closely monitor the spread of
illegal information," he said. "We have noted that
the U.S. is doing a good job on this front." Lin Jiang
Huai, the head of China Information Security Technology, credits
America for giving him the idea to sell biometric IDs and
other surveillance tools to the Chinese police. "Bush
helped me get my vision," he has said. Similarly, when
challenged on the fact that dome cameras are appearing three
to a block in Shenzhen and Guangzhou, Chinese companies respond
that their model is not the East German Stasi but modern-day
London.
Human-rights activists are quick to point out
that while the tools are the same, the political contexts
are radically different. China has a government that uses
its high-tech web to imprison and torture peaceful protesters,
Tibetan monks and independent-minded journalists. Yet even
here, the lines are getting awfully blurry. The U.S. currently
has more people behind bars than China, despite a population
less than a quarter of its size. And Sharon Hom, executive
director of the advocacy group Human Rights in China, says
that when she talks about China's horrific human-rights record
at international gatherings, "There are two words that
I hear in response again and again: Guantánamo Bay."
The Fourth Amendment prohibition against illegal
search and seizure made it into the U.S. Constitution precisely
because its drafters understood that the power to snoop is
addictive. Even if we happen to trust in the good intentions
of the snoopers, the nature of any government can change rapidly
— which is why the Constitution places limits on the
tools available to any regime. But the drafters could never
have imagined the commercial pressures at play today. The
global homeland-security business is now worth an estimated
$200 billion — more than Hollywood and the music industry
combined. Any sector of that size inevitably takes on its
own momentum. New markets must be found — which, in
the Big Brother business, means an endless procession of new
enemies and new emergencies: crime, immigration, terrorism.
In Shenzhen one night, I have dinner with a
U.S. business consultant named Stephen Herrington. Before
he started lecturing at Chinese business schools, teaching
students concepts like brand management, Herrington was a
military-intelligence officer, ascending to the rank of lieutenant
colonel. What he is seeing in the Pearl River Delta, he tells
me, is scaring the hell out of him — and not for what
it means to China.
"I can guarantee you that there are people
in the Bush administration who are studying the use of surveillance
technologies being developed here and have at least skeletal
plans to implement them at home," he says. "We can
already see it in New York with CCTV cameras. Once you have
the cameras in place, you have the infrastructure for a powerful
tracking system. I'm worried about what this will mean if
the U.S. government goes totalitarian and starts employing
these technologies more than they are already. I'm worried
about the threat this poses to American democracy."
Herrington pauses. "George W. Bush,"
he adds, "would do what they are doing here in a heartbeat
if he could."
China-bashing never fails to soothe the Western
conscience — here is a large and powerful country that,
when it comes to human rights and democracy, is so much worse
than Bush's America. But during my time in Shenzhen, China's
youngest and most modern city, I often have the feeling that
I am witnessing not some rogue police state but a global middle
ground, the place where more and more countries are converging.
China is becoming more like us in very visible ways (Starbucks,
Hooters, cellphones that are cooler than ours), and we are
becoming more like China in less visible ones (torture, warrantless
wiretapping, indefinite detention, though not nearly on the
Chinese scale).
What is most disconcerting about China's surveillance
state is how familiar it all feels. When I check into the
Sheraton in Shenzhen, for instance, it looks like any other
high-end hotel chain — only the lobby is a little more
modern and the cheerful clerk doesn't just check my passport
but takes a scan of it.
"Are you making a copy?" I ask.
"No, no," he responds helpfully. "We're
just sending a copy to the police."
Up in my room, the Website that pops up on my
laptop looks like every other Net portal at a hotel —
only it won't let me access human-rights and labor Websites
that I know are working fine. The TV gets CNN International
— only with strange edits and obviously censored blackouts.
My cellphone picks up a strong signal for the China Mobile
network. A few months earlier, in Davos, Switzerland, the
CEO of China Mobile bragged to a crowd of communications executives
that "we not only know who you are, we also know where
you are." Asked about customer privacy, he replied that
his company only gives "this kind of data to government
authorities" — pretty much the same answer I got
from the clerk at the front desk.
When I leave China, I feel a powerful relief:
I have escaped. I am home safe. But the feeling starts to
fade as soon as I get to the customs line at JFK, watching
hundreds of visitors line up to have their pictures taken
and fingers scanned. In the terminal, someone hands me a brochure
for "Fly Clear." All I need to do is have my fingerprints
and irises scanned, and I can get a Clear card with a biometric
chip that will let me sail through security.
Later, I look it up: The company providing the
technology is L-1.
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