英政府大规模部署人脸识别技术,引发人权组织担忧
快速阅读: 纪录片揭示深圳通过监控摄像头追踪居民一举一动,英国也以安全名义实施类似监控,如逮捕祈祷者、监控购物和集会,质疑政府保护对象实为自身,而非民众。
I just watched a documentary on Shenzhen, China, where people are tracked from the second they step out their front door until the moment they close it behind them at night. Every purchase, every trip, every face scanned. And now, would anyone like to point out how the UK is any different – wrapping this Orwellian nutcrackery in the soft, paternalistic language of safety?
Answer: None. In China, surveillance cameras track jaywalkers and deduct fines directly from their bank accounts. In the UK, you can literally be arrested (and one man has) for committing the “thought crime” of praying silently in a place the government didn’t like. So is it really that unfathomable that facial recognition pings every time you roll your eyes at a politician’s speech? Automatic alerts if you buy “too much” red meat or dare to attend the wrong kind of rally?
We’re told it’s to “protect us” from crime. Funny, isn’t it? How governments
can’t
stop KNIFE ATTACKS in London but somehow have the resources to scan millions of innocent faces at Tesco. Protecting who, exactly? It’s not the children, and it’s certainly not the public – it’s the state, protecting itself from ever being questioned.
We need to stop pretending there’s any meaningful difference between what’s happening in the UK and what’s happened in China. One just sells it with more polite accents and a Union Jack paint. Surveillance is surveillance, whether it’s a CCTV camera in Shenzhen or a Tesco scanner in Nottingham.
The UK is well and truly cooked.
(以上内容均由Ai生成)