Disease the Catalyst?

With the novel coronavirus we are seeing an unprecedented isolation of one country to stop the spread of disease. While technically it is not too different to the flu, the newness and potential to evolve are very worrisome.

Even if this disease is contained outside of China, it is looking like it will not be snuffed out within their borders. In theory, China could and the world might have a very difficult decision to make – open the borders and cause more infection and deaths (even though they are small numbers in the greater scheme of things), versus the benefits of tourism and free trade.

Even if the disease is contained within China, the template is now in place. Any new virus will be reacted to swifter and harsher. At least China has the infrastructure and practice in place to perhaps nullify it. However the other similar cases have emerged from the “East” side of Africa, and they would not respond as quickly nor do they (I’m generalising) have a population that is so trained to do as they are told.

It is totally possible that Great Split starts with disease, and then everything else just becomes to difficult. After all, current splitting comes from fear regarding economies, security and territory. And fear of dropping dead from a mystery illness trumps those.

Russia Testing Internet Split

The reasoning is unclear – I can’t imagine any temporary event that could cause them to flick the switch. But perhaps they have read this site, and figure they are going to go it alone one day 😉

In the next two weeks, Russia is planning to attempt something no other country has tried before. It’s going to test whether it can disconnect from the rest of the world electronically while keeping the internet running for its citizens. This means it will have to reroute all its data internally, rather than relying on servers abroad.

The test is key to a proposed “sovereign internet” law currently working its way through Russia’s government. It looks likely to be eventually voted through and signed into law by President Vladimir Putin, though it has stalled in parliament for now.
Technology Review

It Could Start With The Internet

Sometime before April, the Russian government plans to briefly disconnect the entire country from the internet.
https://futurism.com/russia-internet-security-test

This is a defensive approach, a response to any potential cyber attack. But it could be used for the opposite reason, now that the switch is in place.

They are already close to being on their own: The Russian government announced in 2017 that it would handle up to 95 percent of all internet traffic locally — that is, independent from the rest of the world — by 2020.

China Bans Millions of Travellers

China’s National Public Credit Information Center on Friday released a report that said it stopped 17.5 million people from buying airplane tickets and 5.5 million from hopping on a train in 2018 because they had low “social credit” scores. Another 290,000 people were stopped from getting a high-paying senior management job.

Fortune.com

And that is from a limited trial. While communist countries like China and Russia have embraced capitalism in recent years, the authoritarian rule is as strong as ever, enhanced by technology.

Saudi Arabia Invests $20B in Pakistan

Pakistan has now received massive investment from both China and Saudi Arabia. The Saudi deal also includes the release of 2,000 Pakistani prisoners.

Being a memorandum of understanding means that the actual deals could fly under the radar later. Presumably the average Pakistani will not benefit in any way…

Khan welcomed Saudi investment in areas of oil refining, petrochemicals, energy and other sectors. “We have CPEC (China-Pakistan Economic Corridor), we have links with China. So we welcome Saudi Arabia to participate with us. It’s an exciting future,” the Pakistani prime minister said. 

CPEC is a package of infrastructure, energy and port-building projects Beijing is funding in Pakistan as part of its global Road and Belt Initiative. China has already invested $19 billion over the past five years and plans to invest billions more to construct industrial zones. 

Pakistan maintains strong political, cultural, economic and defense ties with Saudi Arabia. The Saudi Kingdom hosts more than 2.5 million Pakistani expatriates, and is a key source of oil supplies for Islamabad – on deferred payments, as well cash grants to help Pakistan’s often ailing economy.

Chinese Facial Recognition

The Sky Net programme, now renamed Pingan Chengshi, or Safe Cities, claimed to have connected 170 million cameras across China last year. By 2020, another 400 million units will be installed.

…The trade war will lead to a tech war which is a data war which leads to competing forms of artificial intelligence.
Source: Medium

More data. More funding. Bigger datasets. China is winning the facial recognition game. Allegedly the NYPD are using Chinese systems for this.

While physical products from China like 5G can be blacklisted by the US, it is very hard to keep software out. And software is perhaps easier to use for espionage than hardware.

This particular product could lead to new US regulations regarding the source of software, or perhaps the ability of software to reach non-USA servers.

China: Deadbeat Debtor Tracker App

China Daily: If you catch someone engaging in activities that suggest they can afford to pay their debts, you can tell on them with this WeChat app…

Called “a map of deadbeat debtors”, the program allows users to find out whether there are any debtors within 500 meters.

The debtor’s information is available to check in the program, making it easier for people to whistle-blow on debtors capable of paying their debts.

Poland arrests Huawei spy

Poland could consider banning the use of Huawei products by public bodies, a senior government official said on Sunday, following the arrest of a Chinese Huawei official in the east European country last week.

The Polish government could also look to tighten legislation to allow the authorities to limit the availability of products made by any company deemed to pose a threat to security.

Poland arrested a Chinese employee of Huawei and a former Polish security official on spying allegations, officials and sources told Reuters on Friday, a move that could fuel Western security concerns about the telecoms equipment maker.

https://www.itnews.com.au/news/poland-could-ban-huawei-products-after-employee-arrest-517822