MIC DROP: Jordan Peterson warns Jim Jordan and members of Congress that America is quickly becoming China 2.0



China is well known for being a surveillance state, but according to Jordan Peterson, America is not far behind.

Last week, he made the following statement to a congressional committee:

“There are now 700 million CCTVs in China under the rule of the Communist Party. The system to which those electronic eyes are attached is the most complete state apparatus of surveillance yet imagined with the the ability not only to recognize faces at a distance, but gait itself when facial features are hidden or obscured.”

This invasive surveillance software has been ominously named “Skynet after the rogue and all-seeing technology that took such a dreadfully wrong turn in the famous science fiction movie 'Terminator' series, featuring artificially intelligent robots hell-bent on protecting themselves by destroying humanity.”

China’s Skynet system allows the government “access to everything [citizens] possess electronically,” including “their savings and their access to travel.” Their “access to the world can be reduced to zero if [their] social credit score falls beyond an arbitrary minimum,” which allows them to be “shut out of all activities,” such as “driving, shopping, working, eating, finding shelter, and even fraternizing with friends and family.”

“This has also opened up the opportunity for the government to extract slave-like labor from its citizens” who are desperate to “increase their [social credit] score and remain part of human society,” Peterson warned.

While China’s tyrannical Skynet system sounds like something from a dystopian novel, it’s all too real, and according to Peterson, America is heading in the same direction.

“Why is any of this relevant to people in the West?” he asked.

“Well, because the technology that the Chinese Communist Party employs is an extension of Western technology because we already fell prey to the terrible temptation of lockdown employed by that state in the face of hypothetical crisis once,” he said, referencing the COVID-19 pandemic.

Further, the West is prone to falling victim to a Skynet-like system due to the “convenience of universal and automatic recognition of identity and partly because any problem whatsoever that now confronts us can easily be used to justify the increasing reach of the security and nanny state,” said Peterson.

“We all live so much in the virtual world in consequence of our purchasing habits and modes of electronically mediated communication that our very selves have become reducible to … data — the modern equivalent of our footprint” and “an image of our identity,” which is “increasingly bought and sold by the invisible corporate brokers.”

These “brokers” then use the information for advertising purposes — “to sell us what we so desperately and carelessly and conveniently want,” said Peterson, but what most people fail to realize is that it “can also be used to track, monitor, and punish everything we do and say.”

“Governments can and are colluding with these corporate agents to develop a picture, not only of our actions, but of our thoughts and words, so that deviation from the desired end can be mapped, rewarded, and punished.”

“The development of a digital identity and currency … will facilitate the development of a surveillance state — the scope of which optimistic pessimists of totalitarianism, such as George Orwell, could scarcely imagine.”

“The ultimate fascist collusion between gigantic, self-interested corporations and paranoid, security-obsessed, anti-human governments … becomes ever more likely. ‘If you have nothing to hide, you will have nothing to fear’ will be the slogan commandeered by those most likely to turn to surveillance,” Peterson warned.


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High-tech handgun with 'fingerprint and facial recognition biometrics' only shoots in the hands of authorized users



Biofire is selling a high-tech handgun that only unlocks and shoots in the hands of an authorized user whose identity is verified via fingerprint or facial recognition technology.

The 9mm "Biofire Smart Gun" is powered by a rechargeable battery that the company claims will allow for several hours of continuous shooting or can power the gun "for several months with average use," according to a press release.

"Biofire's Guardian Biometric Engine integrates state-of-the-art capacitive fingerprint identification and 3D infrared facial recognition systems that independently verify a user's identity - whichever recognizes the user first, unlocks the firearm. It works in a wide variety of conditions, including if a user is wearing gloves or a face covering. Customizable LED indicators show when the gun is armed," the company wrote.

Biofire says that the weapon locks once it is no longer being held by an approved user: "The firearm immediately locks when it leaves an authorized user's hand. Integrated IR sensors in the grip keep the firearm armed while an authorized user is holding the gun, removing a need to continuously authenticate their biometrics."

The company promotes the product on its website with phrases such as "Always Locked" and "Instantly Accessible."

The gun starts at $1,499, but it will be awhile before buyers get their hands on them because the company is not yet shipping the product.

"Biofire's approach is totally novel: we've applied high-precision engineering principles to make a meaningful impact on preventable firearm deaths among children. No one had tried that before. As a result, Biofire is now offering the most technologically advanced consumer firearm the industry's ever seen," Biofire CEO and founder Kai Kloepfer said, according to the press release. "The Biofire Smart Gun shoots like any high-quality firearm, but it also feels like you're holding the future in your hand. This is a new era in firearm safety driven by ambition and optimism, motivated by the idea that we can in fact help save people's lives."

Hands On With a Smart Gun That Actually Works www.youtube.com

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London adding millions of Chinese CCTV cameras with facial recognition capability



The capital city of the United Kingdom has for years been quietly installing CCTV cameras, manufactured in China, which contain the capacity for facial recognition.

According to the U.K. Daily Mail, millions of cameras designed "to prevent crime and promote public safety" and built by one of two Chinese companies, Dahua and Hikvision, have been installed across all 32 London boroughs. The Daily Mail gives an unsettling description of the cameras made by Dahua: "It is a disturbingly anthropomorphic CCTV camera, with two lenses that resemble eyes and two other indeterminate features that serve as the nose and mouth; and it hangs from a pole ringed with spikes to protect its hardware from would-be thieves or vandals."

But perhaps even more unsettling than the supposed physical structure of the camera is its capacity for facial recognition. The technology used to collect biometric data about a person's face and head is so sophisticated that the Chinese Communist Party allegedly used it to identify Uyghur Muslim minorities on the streets so that they could be apprehended and sent to a concentration camp, according to the report. Dahua even promotes the feature as a "Real Time Uyghur Warning."

Because of the facial recognition capabilities in these cameras and the fact that they've been used to facilitate possible crimes against humanity upon Uyghur Muslims, the United States has banned the use of Dahua and Hikvision cameras. However, at least one U.S. facial recognition company, Clearview AI, still benefited from the Dahua and Hikvision cameras used in Britain. In May, Clearview AI was discovered to have illegally acquired the online images of millions of British nationals without their knowledge or consent. The U.K.'s Information Commissioner's Office has since ordered Clearview AI to destroy the images and pay a fine of £7.5 million.

Though the sheer number of CCTV cameras in Britain and their Chinese provenance have incited the ire of many civil and human rights advocates, most British municipal councils and police forces insist that the cameras are not currently utilizing the facial recognition feature. But this assurance has done little to temper the prevailing skepticism.

"Even if (the technology is) not being used for the most intrusive capabilities at the moment," said digital researcher Samuel Woodhams, "it wouldn’t be that much of a jump to do it."

London is currently the third most surveilled city in the entire world, and four of the top five most surveilled cities are all in China. The only other European city to crack the top 50 is Berlin, listed at No. 50.

The IRS may start requiring facial scans to access financial documents



The Internal Revenue Service may soon require the American people to digitally scan their faces in order to file their taxes and access their financial records, the Washington Post reported.

Currently, Americans can file their taxes the way they always have, via the United States Postal Service or e-file, but by the summer of 2022, the IRS is expecting Americans to upload pictures or brief videos of their face via smartphone, tablet, or computer to access their personal records, per a November 2021 press release from the IRS.

The federal government awarded an $86 million contract to the digital security firm ID.me in order to accomplish this feat. ID.me is already testing this system; if individuals try to access their IRS documents online, there is a good chance they will encounter the ID.me identification protocols.

ID.me reported that in December 2021, more than 60,000 face photos were submitted in a single day, although it is unclear how many of these were uploaded by taxpayers. There were also high numbers of complaints regarding the identity verification process that caused people to abandon the process out of frustration.

According to ID.me’s website, “the company’s technology meets the highest federal standards” and already has existing relationships with “27 states, multiple federal agencies, and over 500 name brand retailers.”

The company’s homepage touts its relationship with the United States Department of Veterans Affairs, Linkedin, and the insurance company USAA. Notably, ID.me also does business with the Chinese technology company Lenovo.

The United States government buys a considerable amount of technology from Lenovo, despite it being controlled by the Chinese Communist Party and funneling sensitive data to the Chinese intelligence apparatus.

What the IRS’ relationship with ID.me means for the future of private tax preparation services — like H&R Block — remains to be seen, but adding the requirement of facial recognition to access one’s tax records is likely not to be a popular decision once implemented on a large scale.

Furthermore, despite digital technology infiltrating every aspect of the human experience, there remains a sizable discrepancy in the American people’s tech-savviness. Many people in older generations still struggle with accessing and navigating digital platforms, whether they have access to the internet or not.

Some members of Congress have expressed concern over giving ID.me such power over sensitive personal information and what it could mean for the future of data privacy and transparency in government.

Rep. Ted Lieu (D-Calif.) called the IRS and ID.me collaboration a “very, very bad idea” and that it would “further weaken Americans’ privacy.”

Sen. Ron Wyden (D-Ore.) said that he was “very disturbed that Americans may have to submit to a facial recognition system” to “access personal data on the IRS website.”

I\u2019m very disturbed that Americans may have to submit to a facial recognition system, wait on hold for hours, or both, to access personal data on the IRS website. While e-filing returns remain unaffected, I\u2019m pushing the IRS for greater transparency on this plan.https://twitter.com/AliciaAdamczyk/status/1484219775740002307\u00a0\u2026
— Ron Wyden (@Ron Wyden) 1642725625

A Senate Finance Committee aide told the Washington Post that the committee is working toward scheduling meetings with the IRS and ID.me to address these concerns.

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TikTok data gives Beijing 'shapes and styles of faces' China 'can't get in the mainland'

China is using images of TikTok users to improve its facial recognition capacities, according to American lawmakers and analysts monitoring the unfolding dispute over the social media giant’s U.S. operations.