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paulmozur's profile
Paul Mozur 孟建國
Paul Mozur 孟建國
Paul Mozur 孟建國
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@paulmozur

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Paul Mozur 孟建國Verified account

@paulmozur

Cover tech in Asia for @NYTimes. I am so wise I had my mouth sewn shut. pmozur at http://nytimes.com 

Seoul, Republic of Korea
nytimes.com/by/paul-mozur
Joined September 2009

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    1. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

      To fight the coronavirus China is undertaking its biggest experiment yet in rule by data: an app that automates quarantines. Alibaba software, using unexplained data, now decides whether millions can leave their home. It also shares data with the police.https://www.nytimes.com/2020/03/01/business/china-coronavirus-surveillance.html …

      146 replies . 3,243 retweets 3,989 likes
      Show this thread
    2. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

      The police part is a big step. Firms like Ali often share data with gov't, but there’s a process. In this case, the moment a user grants permissions, it runs a function “reportInfoAndLocationToPolice.” That's a new level of police tracking embedded in a hugely popular app.pic.twitter.com/ZD3gGy7p9f

      7 replies . 140 retweets 305 likes
      Show this thread
      Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

      Effectively, the app is required now to do anything in many places. Here's what it looks like trying to get onto the subway in Hangzhou. Overnight the city went from lockdown to relying on the app. If your code is green, you can ride. If you're given yellow or red, you're stuck.pic.twitter.com/rettbnhbWW

      6:57 pm - 1 Mar 2020
      • 199 Retweets
      • 342 Likes
      • Auntie Alice 朱姨姨 no one FKA antchoiny Christian Martin 🧢⬆️🇺🇸🇮🇱🇵🇸🇺🇦🌊🥣☕️🤓   Mario Vilas Live 🇺🇸 Carol H Ramon HallandaleBeach/Hollywood Blog
      12 replies . 199 retweets 342 likes
        1. New conversation
        2. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          The color codes, checkpoints, and phone searches all smack of policies carried out in Xinjiang. People in China's east aren't used to it, and there was plenty of grumbling in Hangzhou. Subway guards told us passengers, usually older, sometimes cursed and yelled at them.pic.twitter.com/WHgcLjZCI0

          9 replies . 117 retweets 274 likes
          Show this thread
        3. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          Watch the guy in the teal backpack. He dutifully got the guard’s help setting it up, but got annoyed and walked through the checkpoint. She runs him down, but in the process others pass her unchecked. And traffic was light, when it's more full, there will be more problems.pic.twitter.com/ECGBp9fv3v

          1 reply . 52 retweets 178 likes
          Show this thread
        4. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          It's not just the subway. To get into the city you need a green code. You also need it to get into most neighborhoods, public spaces, stores, and restaurants. Here's a few other checkpoints screening for the app.pic.twitter.com/xjcoQCdvfF

          1 reply . 89 retweets 213 likes
          Show this thread
        5. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          Many who have red or yellow codes now lead lives as partial pariahs. With the digital scarlet letter they can't go out or return to work. Plenty don't understand why their code is red or yellow, yet when they call up a complaint hotline it's generally busy.pic.twitter.com/Cj8n03rZLh

          3 replies . 229 retweets 410 likes
          Show this thread
        6. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          “The broad rules aren’t public....How it assigns red or yellow codes isn’t public. And there’s no clear way to make your code turn green,” said one man, who took his chances and was able to get through a checkpoint.

          2 replies . 81 retweets 216 likes
          Show this thread
        7. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          Others haven't been so lucky. A subway guard told us she turned away a man with a red code, even though he had a letter explaining he had sat a 14 day quarantine. The rules are the rules, she said.pic.twitter.com/g249qGdCYT

          4 replies . 58 retweets 173 likes
          Show this thread
        8. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          A separate woman from Hubei, the province that is the center of the coronavirus outbreak, is stuck there with a red code. “It divides people up based on where they’re from,” she said. “Isn’t that discrimination?”pic.twitter.com/FvUadRsUm0

          2 replies . 66 retweets 196 likes
          Show this thread
        9. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          Drivers too, check for a green code and show theirs. One told us he trusted Jack Ma and Alibaba’s big data. Anyone with a yellow or red code was dangerous and had been in close contact with the disease, he said, an overstatement of what the codes mean. No rides for them.pic.twitter.com/lcx7zQ5Umv

          1 reply . 61 retweets 171 likes
          Show this thread
        10. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          It's not clear where the data goes or how the decisions are being made. Likely it ends up in a place like this, a Hangzhou police command center. Perhaps unsurprisingly, because China has empowered its public security forces recently, they have an outsized role in the response.pic.twitter.com/ZqQHIAh1O9

          1 reply . 58 retweets 177 likes
          Show this thread
        11. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          In propaganda they discuss reworking surveillance systems to deal w/ the virus. They also lead strategies for containing it, like setting up checkpoints. The police being so heavily involved in a public health issue does show how far down the road to police state China has gone.pic.twitter.com/Ffve1KEgIt

          2 replies . 84 retweets 208 likes
          Show this thread
        12. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          The codes can't last forever. They're too inconvenient. But each time there's a crisis in China, the state takes more power. “The coronavirus outbreak is proving to be one of those landmarks in the history of the spread of mass surveillance in China," @wang_maya told us.pic.twitter.com/j3OPr3o63D

          6 replies . 142 retweets 296 likes
          Show this thread
        13. Paul Mozur 孟建國‏Verified account @paulmozur 1 Mar 2020

          It’s not clear what the precedent will be. Likely it's newly empowered neighborhood committees, getting the population used to checkpoints, and potentially, companies getting comfortable sharing location info from apps directly to the police.pic.twitter.com/ejTPcofVZx

          14 replies . 75 retweets 210 likes
          Show this thread
        14. End of conversation

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