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Date: | Tue, 28 Apr 2015 08:42:07 -0400 |
Content-Type: | multipart/alternative |
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Alejandro,
You are of course right here. There are multiple worries including an
unlimited invasion of privacy, government monitoring and evaluation of
personal behavior, and a "Social Credit Score" to be used by whom and
for what? Consider a system where your 100% personal opinion (below)
posted on ncsg-discuss becomes input into Alejandro Acosta's government
file used to determined your Social Credit Score. As the recent posting
about Ireland and the recent events in India indicate, we are on the
edge of an impending Internet enclosure movement where the net
neutrality area was just the first border skirmish.
Sam
/On 27/04/2015 10:56 PM, Alejandro Acosta wrote://
/
> /Not being an expert I would say that more regulations is more
> bureaucracy which makes everything slower and inefficient creating more
> corruption. Generally speaking results are not good for anybody.
>
> 100% My personal opinion.
>
> I wish I'm wrong.
>
> Alejandro,
>
>
> El 4/27/2015 a las 7:50 PM, Sam Lanfranco escribió:
> /
>> /This looks like one more "fence" being added to the Internet enclosure
>> movement:
>>
>> "The Chinese government is currently implementing a nationwide
>> electronic system, called the Social Credit System, attributing to
>> each of its 1,3 billion citizens a score for his or her behavior. The
>> system will be based on various criteria, ranging from financial
>> credibility and criminal record to social media behavior. From 2020
>> onwards each adult citizen should, besides his identity card, have
>> such a credit code."
>>
>> See:
>> http://www.volkskrant.nl/buitenland/china-rates-its-own-citizens-including-online-behaviour~a3979668/
>> <http://www.volkskrant.nl/buitenland/china-rates-its-own-citizens-including-online-behaviour%7Ea3979668/>
>>
>>
>> Sam L.
>> /
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