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Alistair Penbroke's avatar

I work in tech, and have worked in the past for a smartphone company. Nothing to disagree with here on the concept of sharp power and what China seems to want, but a few tech-related parts jumped out and didn't seem right to me in this essay:

> [Russia's] lack of economic heft and its lower technology level mean that it doesn’t have nearly the reach that China does.

Russia is one of the very few countries in the world that has been able to develop and keep domestic equivalents to Google, Gmail/Hotmail and Facebook. It also has produced some very advanced software companies that have successfully sold into western business for years (e.g. Kaspersky, JetBrains). China's success is at best similar or if you wanted to you could argue it's worse, because TikTok is free (people don't really choose to pay money for it in the way they buy Russian products) and the rest are manufacturing companies that benefited immensely from cheap factory labor, something that doesn't really apply to software companies.

In other words: don't underestimate the Russians. Given a choice between being given a team of 10 Russian computer engineers or 10 Chinese, I'm gonna pick the Russians every time.

> First, internet users migrated from the Web (where attempts at tracking can be detected and blocked) to apps, which watch and record pretty much everything you do in the app

The privacy differences between mobile apps and websites are trivial and hardly matter, despite what you may read in parts of the media. You can argue that in some cases websites have worse privacy than apps and that would be perfectly credible.

> internet use switched from PCs to smartphones, which are far easier to track in physical space, and far easier to link to a user

Again the differences are small. Phones only share precise location if you agree to it, and if you don't then historically it's actually easier to figure out the location of a PC than a phone, because the PC is far more likely to be using an IP address that maps directly to your geolocation whereas mobile IPs are invariably useless due to heavy use of CGNAT.

> A sufficiently powerful government can use your phone, and the apps on your phone, to track where you are and what you’re doing at all times.

They can track where you are if they can either hack or compel the phone company to tell them, but phones have always worked that way even before smartphones and the internet. Tracking what you are doing is much harder. They can see which websites or services you interact with but not necessarily what you are doing on them. For that they'd have to either hack the phone, or hack the entities you're interacting with, or compel them to hand over the data.

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Rappatoni's avatar

Obviously, liberalism and authoritarianism don't mix. So respond symmetrically: whenever the CCP tries to increase control over "its" people in free societies, decrease the CCP's control over its people at home. There are many ways to do this (send some star link terminals over there, assist dissidents with encrypted software, etc.) but the most effective is to encourage emigration.

The CCP is absolutely livid about the UK's BNO visa program for Hong Kongers as is witnessed by its propaganda outlets' constant raging and whining about it. Every time one of those secret police stations is discovered grant another 10.000 Chinese visa. Voting with one's feet still works and China cannot afford the brain drain.

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