China & the NWO: Internet crimes, Sesame Credit & Social Eng

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Daglord
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China & the NWO: Internet crimes, Sesame Credit & Social Eng

Postby Daglord » Tue Aug 18, 2015 8:30 pm

anyone confirm?

Chinese police arrest 15,000 for Internet crimes (Tue Aug 18, 2015 8:51am EDT)
http://www.reuters.com/article/2015/08/18/us-china-internet-idUSKCN0QN1A520150818

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Police in China said on Tuesday they had arrested about 15,000 people for crimes that "jeopardized Internet security", as the government moves to tighten controls on the Internet.

Since taking over in 2013, President Xi Jinping has led an increasingly harsh crackdown on China's Internet, which the Communist Party views with greater importance and acknowledges it needs to control, academics and researchers say. Police have investigated 7,400 cases of cyber crime, the Ministry of Public Security said in a statement on its website. It did not make clear over what period the arrests were made, but referred to a case dating to last December.

yup. this is the actual logo for the 'Internet Surveillance Division of the Public Security Bureau': https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jingjing_and_Chacha

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Jingjing and Chacha (警警 and 察察, a pun on the Chinese word for police, Chinese: 警察; pinyin: jǐngchá) are the cartoon mascots of the Internet Surveillance Division of the Public Security Bureau in Shenzhen, People's Republic of China. Debuting on January 22, 2006, they are used to, amongst other things, inform Chinese Internet users what is and is not legal to consult or write on the Chinese Internet.

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China launched a six-month program last month, code-named "Cleaning the Internet".

"For the next step, the public security organs will continue to increase their investigation and crackdown on cyber crimes," the ministry said.

The campaign would also focus on breaking major cases and destroying online criminal gangs, it added. The sweep targeted websites providing "illegal and harmful information" besides advertisements for pornography, explosives and firearms and gambling. In total, the police said they investigated 66,000 websites.

China runs one of the world's most sophisticated online censorship mechanisms, known as the Great Firewall. Censors keep a tight grip on what can be published, particularly material that could potentially undermine the ruling Communist Party. In February, China's internet watchdog said it would ban from March 1 internet accounts that impersonate people or organizations, and enforce the requirement for people to use their real names when registering online accounts.

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Luigi
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Postby Luigi » Tue Aug 18, 2015 11:39 pm

This will be The West in 50 years if current trends continue.
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Som-Pong
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Postby Som-Pong » Wed Aug 19, 2015 4:49 am

Compared to America China is a bastion of Freedom.

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Devil's Advocate
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Postby Devil's Advocate » Wed Aug 19, 2015 10:13 am

A lot of these may have been legitimate, there is a lot of hacking and cyber crime coming out of China.


Why do Asian cartoonists nearly always draw Asians with huge eyes, is this how they see themselves?



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Daglord
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Postby Daglord » Wed Aug 19, 2015 12:00 pm

Devil's Advocate wrote:A lot of these may have been legitimate, there is a lot of hacking and cyber crime coming out of China.

TRUTH. there has been a SHIT TON lately. most of this could be legit & also serve as cover.

it's the sweep targeting "websites providing illegal and harmful information" that I found disturbing & awfully subjective for a place like china, the "bastion of freedom". that place is already like a black hole for journalism.

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Luigi
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Postby Luigi » Wed Aug 19, 2015 11:41 pm

Devil's Advocate wrote:A lot of these may have been legitimate, there is a lot of hacking and cyber crime coming out of China.


Why do Asian cartoonists nearly always draw Asians with huge eyes, is this how they see themselves?



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Many Asian cultures sees neotony as beautiful and attractive, which probably led to the sexual selection that created Asian features.
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Daglord
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Postby Daglord » Tue Aug 25, 2015 11:30 am

China censoring Black Monday on country’s biggest search engine, Baidu, stopping citizens looking for information about financial chaos
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/china-censoring-black-monday-on-countrys-biggest-search-engine-baidu-stopping-citizens-looking-for-information-about-financial-chaos-10469850.html

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China has been accused of censoring reports about the financial chaos in the country, stopping its citizens from looking for reports about what’s going on. China’s “Black Monday” has sent share prices around the world into freefall, and has led to renewed worries about a slowdown in growth in the country. But its citizens don’t seem to be able to find out why.

Baidu, the country’s biggest search engine, is censoring results related to the chaos, according to George Chen, managing editor of the international edition of the South China Morning Post. When searching for the Chinese characters that translate to stock disaster, the results say that "Due to related rules & policy, some search results won't be shown".

Chinese news sites are mostly hiding the stories on their front pages — though they are covering the huge collapse.

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Xinhuanet, a news site that is run by the state-run Xinhua News Agency, makes little mention of the crash. As with the People’s Daily, another official news site run by the ruling Chinese Communist Party, it buries its report on the crash low down on its home page — where it is only the third-highest story in its business section.

But both sites are reporting the stories, if readers make it there. The People Daily’s report has the headline “Stocks plunge most since 2007 as State support measures fail”, and Xinhuanet has running live updates on the news with the title “China stocks see sharpest decline since 2007”.

The Chinese state interventions mentioned by the domestic press have been sharply criticised by those outside of the country.

"The Chinese government's intervention into stock markets has proven counter-productive,” said Jasper Lawler, market analyst at CMC Markets.

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Postby Daglord » Tue Dec 22, 2015 8:05 pm

China Just Launched the Most Frightening Game Ever — and Soon It Will Be Mandatory
http://theantimedia.org/china-just-launched-the-most-frightening-game-ever-and-soon-it-will-be-mandatory/






China has gamified being an obedient citizen with the creation of Sesame Credit. The game links to your social network and gives you a score for doing things that the government approves of, but it also reduces that score for doing things the government disapproves of. Even your friends' scores affect your own, and being friends with people who have a low score will drag your score down as well. This insidious system applies social pressure on people to ostracize their friends with lower scores, either forcing those friends to change their ways or effectively quarantining their rebellious ideas. While many sci-fi visions of a dystopian future have centered around a bleak government that controls through fear, Sesame Credit shows us that a government can use gamification and positive reinforcement to be just as controlling. And it's real. While currently the system is opt-in, the government plans to make it mandatory in 2020. Once mandatory, it may give rewards for good scores or penalties for bad ones. And in the meantime, making it opt-in has already set the tone for the game: people participate willingly, so they find it fun, and they set a very high standard for what the "average" score should be. Already people have begun sharing their scores on social media.

james corbett has been tracking the implementation of sesame credit for some time. “Coming soon to a NWO near you: social credit! Earn points by behaving like the government wants you to behave! Get penalized if you don’t act like a doubleplusgood citizen! What could be more fun?”






people who think that china & BRICS are the saviors of humanity because they care about people, might want to check out 'china & the NWO' - and yes, they are part of the same system. in fact, one could argue that they are doing the frontwork of the NWO by testing out the social engineering systems.






Military tensions, cyber espionage accusations, a brewing currency war; with every passing day, the headlines paint a convincing portrait of an emerging cold war between China and the West. But is this surface level reality the whole picture, or is there a deeper level to this conflict? Is China an opponent to the New World Order global governmental system or a witting collaborator with it? Join us in this in-depth edition of The Corbett Report podcast as we explore China's position in the New World Order.

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Postby Edge Guerrero » Wed Dec 23, 2015 4:00 pm

- China is growing up on power, isn`t a natural way to try to takedown people on more high positions?

Of course this can be all politics and China doesn`t have any interest on a war, but the media propaganda is putting fear on us.
- I rent this space for advertising

Don't be selfish, preserve this world for the next generations.

I'll never long for what might have been
Regret won't waste my life again
I won't look back I'll fight to remain

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Daglord
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Postby Daglord » Wed Dec 23, 2015 8:35 pm

yeah, not sure.

I lean towards china being a microcosm of the NWO, but have no idea. someone correct me if I'm wrong.

state run media, government censorship & surveillance, golden shield, thought police, child policy, this sesame credit thing. not saying it's a lot better anywhere else (debatable), but it's like an Orwellian nightmare from what I can tell & the scary part is they all seem oblivious or fine with it.

game. set. match.

looking forward to watching the above vid. actually here to do that now...


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