FB pixel

China censors online criticism of digital ID plan

China censors online criticism of digital ID plan
 

China’s plan to introduce a national digital identity system is stirring an online backlash with censors deleting social media comments critical of the initiative.

The proposed cyberspace ID aims to replace login and verification services from private technology companies, curbing excessive data collection by commercial entities and allowing online users to maintain privacy by storing information in a government database. Critics of the proposal, however, fear that the optional digital ID will eventually become mandatory and used to increase government control and surveillance.

The most high-profile victim of online censorship is prominent law professor Lao Dongyan from Tsinghua University in Beijing, a known critic of the country’s widespread use of facial recognition.

Last week, Lao posted a long criticism of the digital ID on Chinese social media site Weibo, comparing the system with the country’s health apps used to restrict movement during the Covid-19 pandemic. The legal expert argued that the digital ID could be used to monitor online activities and turn online access into “a privilege that requires permission to enjoy” – Chinese authorities have been known to make ostensibly voluntary government apps into mandatory ones.

After attacks from government-aligned social media communities, Lao’s post was removed while her Weibo account with 800,000 followers was muted for 90 days, according to the South China Morning Post.

Censors have been busy deleting other viral social media posts against the digital ID system as the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) enters a politically sensitive time.

Chinese top political leaders are convening at the Beidaihe meeting, a secretive summer summit held in the coastal resort town of Beidahe in early August each year. The government has previously faced backlash over the draconian restrictions on movement enforced by mandatory Covid-19 health code apps. The public furor resulted in a series of protests in 2022, a rare example in a state that strictly controls political unrest.

Despite rising opposition, Beijing is unlikely to give up its goal of introducing the digital ID, according to an analysis by the Nikkei Asia Review.

The Ministry of Public Security and the Cyberspace Administration of China issued the draft regulation on July 26 and announced they would solicit public comments for one month. Trials of the national digital ID system began just days after the proposal’s release.

Under a pilot scheme, users need to submit their national IDs and go through facial recognition verification. No decision has been made on when the digital IDs will be issued.

Many of the online services in China, including social media, already require real-name registration for users.

Related Posts

Article Topics

 |   |   |   |   |   |   | 

Latest Biometrics News

 

Certification becoming trust signal for procurement and market positioning

One consequence of the explosion of synthetic media and AI-generated identities is that trusted identity infrastructure has become strategically valuable…

 

IAD testing set to take off as QTSP deadline passes, EUDI Wallet onboarding begins

Independent assessments of biometric injection attack detection (IAD) are about to become significantly more prominent, with the deadline for Qualified…

 

UK’s proposed OS-level age verification could eliminate part of DVS market

The UK government is mooting device-level restrictions on nude images that could usher in a new era of a kid-friendly…

 

UK promises age assurance for social media, device-level child safety controls

How many times can a head of government pledge to do something about harmful social media platforms before they’re obligated…

 

Aware upgrades biometric orchestration platform with ROC, Mitek integrations

Aware has added ROC and Mitek as biometric technology partners for its digital identity orchestration platform, Awareness, as part of…

 

Appeals board upholds 4 FaceTec biometric liveness detection patents

The U.S. Patent Trial and Appeal Board (PTAB) has ruled in a fight over intellectual property for biometric liveness detection between…

Comments

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Biometric Market Analysis and Buyer's Guides

Most Viewed This Week

Featured Company

Biometrics Insight, Opinion

Digital ID In-Depth

Biometrics White Papers

Biometrics Events