June 24th, 2008
Big Brother is listening
China Mobile users, did you know you’re paying for your own monitoring device !
Serious concerns were raised in Davos last week about the ability of the Chinese government to spy on the country’s 500 million mobile phone users.
The head of China’s biggest mobile phone company, which has more than 300 million subscribers, stunned delegates by revealing that the company had unlimited access to the personal data of its customers and handed it over to Chinese security officials when demanded.
We know who you are, but also where you are,” said the CEO of China Mobile Communications Corporation, Wang Jianzhou, whose company adds six million new customers to its network each month and is already the biggest mobile group in the world by users.
He was explaining how the company could use the personal data of its customers to sell advertising and services to them based on knowledge of where they were and what they were doing.
Unsolicited advertisements by SMS can be annoying, but read the following:
When pressed about the privacy and security implications of this, he added: “We can access the information and see where someone is, but we never give this information away … only if the security authorities ask for it.”
Jonathan Zittrain, a professor of Internet governance and regulation at Oxford University in Britain, stressed how the mobile phone had become a serious threat to privacy in all countries.
“It’s amazing to see how such a comprehensive surveillance network has been set up through the market force of consumer demand,” he told AFP.
“With CCTV (closed circuit television), the government sets it up and you have nothing to say about it. With this (mobile phones), you’re paying for your own monitoring device.”
Isn’t it just great ?
Full article can be viewed here.
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This entry was written by Olivier Falcoz on June 24th, 2008 and filed under Censorship
Tags: China, Communication, Security
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