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Inside China’s surveillance state where millions are watched on Minority Report-style big screen, jaywalkers are caught by facial recognition and police drones bark instructions from loud speakers

Britain will offer a compulsory digital identity plan for British citizens and inhabitants to prevent illegal migration.

However, the ‘dystopic’ plan was met with an angry reaction, and critics argued that the movement could violate civilian freedoms.

Some of them expressed fears that such a plan could turn into a type of Orwellian -style surveillance, which is used in China, where face recognition is close to 1.4 billion large population.

The communist nation is expanding the mass surveillance system throughout the country.

Chinese policemen are wearing sunglasses equipped with face recognition technology to capture crime suspects in the last seven years.

In 2018, the shipping police in Zhengzhou in the center of China were given the latest gadgets to scan passengers in crowded crowds at the train stations and detect suspects.

A smartphone -like camera allows civil servants to take the cups of an individual and compare them with a database in the center.

The system then brings the personal information of the suspect, including the name, ethnicity, gender and address. All information is then returned to the officer’s glasses.

This photo, taken on February 5, 2018, shows a pair of smart gllass -wearing a face recognition system at the Zhengzhou East Railway Station in Zhengzhou in China.

Millions of artificial intelligence -supported surveillance cameras were placed around China to watch the feelings of the citizens and monitor the 'Social Credit' scores

Millions of artificial intelligence -supported surveillance cameras were placed around China to watch the feelings of the citizens and monitor the ‘Social Credit’ scores

Biometric cameras are used to monitor students' concentration levels in schools.

Biometric cameras are used to monitor students’ concentration levels in schools.

Glasses can also tell civil servants to tell the officers about whether the targets are escaped from the law, the address of any hotel they stay with, and information about their internet usage.

This is part of the efforts to create a digital surveillance system that uses various biometric data to close the movements of China’s people – from photographs and iris scans to fingerprints.

According to Reuters, smart glasses can take their face features and car recording plates and match the suspects with the ‘black list’ in real time.

Meanwhile, millions of AI -supported surveillance camera was placed in the country to monitor the feelings of citizens and monitor the ‘Social Credit’ scores.

China also uses City brain supervision, a software system that controls a combination of satellites, drones and fixed cameras to save millions of images.

Thanks to the ‘social score’ system, spy cameras are used to follow Chinese citizens.

Residents with high scores get benefits such as discounts and shorter waiting times, and they are more likely to find jobs.

However, those with lower scores were banned from receiving flights.

China also turned into use of robotic dogs to closely follow the population.

China also turned into use of robotic dogs to closely follow the population.

Drones equipped with speakers are widely used to patrol the streets in China.

Equipped with speakers, drones are widely used in China to patrol the streets.

In the meantime, biometric cameras are used to read people’s feelings to determine if there is a threat to the state.

In schools, they are used to monitor students’ concentration levels.

China has also turned into use of robotic dogs to closely follow the population.

The images shared on social media show how the internal browsers and boots wander the streets and how they approach citizens.

In a fun video, it is seen that a citizen shows his robot dog phones before he is allowed to pass through a door.

Equipped with speakers, drones are widely used to patrol the streets in China and are heavily deployed during their pandemi to force the inhabitants to wear a mask.

A social media clip, how a drone approaches an old woman and says to him: ‘This is the drone who speaks to you. You shouldn’t walk without wearing a mask ‘.

Another clip shows a drone flying on a settled area in an unknown Chinese city for telling the residents on the street: ‘We are always watching you. Be yourself! Or you will carry the legal obligation ‘.

Another way to watch inhabitants is the use of compulsory digital identities in schools.

Another way to watch inhabitants is the use of compulsory digital identities in schools.

China is also playing a shameful game with people who violate the law by exhibiting them with their names and government identity numbers on big advertising boards.

China is also playing a shameful game with people who violate the law by exhibiting them with their names and government identity numbers on big advertising boards.

Another way to watch the residents of housing is the use of compulsory digital identities in schools.

Students can enter their classes through the face recognition system and even pay lunch with only one point of view.

This year, China also launched digital identities to ask users to confirm their identities for internet services – this has contributed more to Beijing’s digital control period. The country also requires identity for most daily activity.

China is also playing a shameful game with people who violate the law by exhibiting them with their names and government identity numbers on large advertising boards.

The idea is that a person who committed a small crime, such as Jaywalking or avoiding debts, is in front of his neighbors and colleagues to humiliate and give them a lesson.

Videos are often shared on social media that shows how illegal residents are ashamed of huge advertising boards.

Shaming tactic has led to some people on the big screens to change phone numbers, addresses and even get lost.

Public jolt is not new in China, and it is used as a way to punish criminal behaviors in ancient times,

If the criminals have different weighted wooden clamps around their necks to introduce the crime and warn others.

When Mao Zedong declared a class war known as the cultural revolution in 1966-76, the guards organized ‘struggle sessions’ in which people accused of capitalist thoughts were verbally and physically exploited in public opinion.

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