In a market-driven system, the data that is collected is usually financial, like loan repayment data. That's because this is the kind of data market entities have access to. In a gov-driven credit system, legal and admin data is used, because that's what governments have.
The tech underpinning the government SCS has been under development for 20 years. Social credit data collection channels were built on top of existing government data-sharing networks. So, those are already in place, although constantly being upgraded.
-
-
The issues with implementing market-driven credit systems in China aren't really tech issues, they're data and regulation issues: what data can you reliably collect? What data *should* you collect? Does that data tell you what you want to know?
- Show replies
New conversation -
-
-
This is far more your area than mine, but do you include private tech in that as well?
-
Not 100% sure what you mean by 'private tech'. If you mean "are private tech firms feeding data directly into the government SCS", no. They're not. But if you mean "did private tech companies help the government build their data sharing infrastructure," yes, they did.
- Show replies
New conversation -
Loading seems to be taking a while.
Twitter may be over capacity or experiencing a momentary hiccup. Try again or visit Twitter Status for more information.