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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, May 4, 2019
Xinjiang surveillance app targets legal, everyday behaviour – rights group
@ascorrespondent-2 May 2019
CHINESE authorities are using a mobile app designed for mass
surveillance to profile, investigate and detain Muslims in Xinjiang by
labelling “completely lawful” behaviour as suspicious, a Human Rights
Watch report said Thursday.
Beijing has come under international criticism over its policies in the
northwest region of Xinjiang, where as many as one million Uighurs and
other mostly Muslim minorities are being held in internment camps,
according to a group of experts cited by the UN.
Human Rights Watch has previously reported that Xinjiang authorities use
a mass surveillance system called the Integrated Joint Operations
Platform (IJOP) to gather information from multiple sources, such as
facial-recognition cameras, wifi sniffers, police checkpoints, banking
records and home visits.
But the new study, entitled “China’s Algorithms of Repression”, worked
with a Berlin-based security company to analyse an app connected to the
IJOP, showing specific acts targeted by the system.
Xinjiang authorities closely watch 36 categories of behaviour, including
those who do not socialise with neighbours, often avoid using the front
door, don’t use a smartphone, donate to mosques “enthusiastically”, and
use an “abnormal” amount of electricity, the group found.
The app also instructs officers to investigate those related to someone
who got a new phone number, or related to others who left the country
and have not returned after 30 days.
“Our research shows, for the first time, that Xinjiang police are using
illegally gathered information about people’s completely lawful behavior
-– and using it against them,” said Maya Wang, senior China researcher
at Human Rights Watch.
“The Chinese government is monitoring every aspect of people’s lives in
Xinjiang, picking out those it mistrusts, and subjecting them to extra
scrutiny.”
“Moving red-line”
The rights group obtained a copy of the app and enlisted cybersecurity
firm Cure53 to “reverse-engineer” it — to disassemble it and look at its
design and data — and examined its source code.
Along with collecting personal information the app prompts officials to
file reports about people, vehicles and events they find suspect — and
sends out “investigative missions” for police to follow up.
Officers are also asked to check whether suspects use any of the 51
internet tools that are deemed suspicious, including foreign messaging
platforms popular outside China like WhatsApp, LINE and Telegram.
A number of people said they or their family members have been detained
for having software such as WhatsApp or a Virtual Private Network (VPN)
installed on their phones during checks by authorities, according to the
report.
The rights group said its findings suggest the IJOP system tracks data
of everyone in Xinjiang by monitoring location data from their phones,
ID cards and vehicles, plus electricity and gas station usage.
“Psychologically, the more people are sure that their actions are
monitored and that they, at anytime, can be judged for moving outside of
a safe grey-space, the more likely they are to do everything to avoid
coming close to crossing a moving red- line,” Samantha Hoffman, an
analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute’s International
Cyber Policy Centre, told AFP.
“There is no rule of law in China, the Party ultimately decides what is
legal and illegal behaviour, and it doesn’t have to be written down.”
The IJOP app was developed by Hebei Far East Communication System
Engineering Company (HBFEC), which at the time of the app’s development
was fully-owned by China Electronics Technology Group Corporation, a
state-owned technology giant (CETC), said Human Rights Watch.
CETC could not be reached and HBFEC did not respond to requests for comment.
Washington last year imposed export controls on key Chinese companies
including HBFEC and other institutions under CETC, citing risks to US
national security and foreign policy interests.
Greg Walton, an independent cybersecurity expert who advised on the
report, said while the system is a “blunt instrument that may be
directly contributing to the massive numbers of people in internment
camps”, the data if stored could be used in the future for more advanced
policing algorithms.
“This means that data collected through the app today may well be
analysed in a few years’ time by far more sophisticated logic,” he said.
© Agence France-Presse