China has ramped up surveillance measures in Xinjiang,Schoolmistress 2 home to much of its Muslim minority population, according to reports from Radio Free Asia.
Authorities sent out a notice over a week ago instructing citizens to install a "surveillance app" on their phones, and are conducting spot checks in the region to ensure that residents have it.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
The notice, written in Uyghur and Chinese, was sent by WeChat to residents in Urumqi, Xinjiang's capital.
SEE ALSO: Here's why breaking WhatsApp and iMessage encryption is such a dangerous ideaAndroid users were instructed to scan the QR code in order to install the Jingwang app that would, as authorities claimed, "automatically detect terrorist and illegal religious videos, images, e-books and electronic documents" stored in the phone. If illegal content was detected, users would be ordered to delete them.
Users who deleted, or did not install the app, would be detained for up to 10 days, according to social media users.
A teardown analysis by users in China showed that the app appears similar to a "citizen safety" (百姓安全) app developed by Urumqi police in April this year. The app, developed in-house, allowed users to report suspicious events to the police.
The app reportedly scans for the MD5 digital signatures of media files in the phone, and matches them to a stored database of offending files classified by the government as illegal "terrorist-related" media.
Jinwang also keeps a copy of Weibo and WeChat records, as well as a record of IMEI numbers, SIM card data and Wifi login data. The records are then sent to a server.
This move is the latest in digital surveillance in Urumqi. In March, government workers were asked to sign an agreement have "terrorist-related" media content, while the police sprung a surprise spot check on a group of nursing students.
"Chinese police are so powerful, particularly in Xinjiang, [that] anyone being stopped is unlikely to be able to refuse the police's requests," Maya Wang, a senior researcher with Human Rights Watch, told Mashable.
"The authorities have a lot of explaining to do about this software, including what it does," she added. "While the authorities have the responsibility to protect public safety, including by fighting terrorism, such mass collection of data from ordinary people is a form of mass surveillance, and an intrusion to privacy."
"I think there is reason to be concerned about what kinds of data these apps may be collecting about users and their activity without their knowledge or consent," said Joshua Rosenzweig, a Hong Kong-based analyst with Amnesty International.
Xinjiang has a population of eight million Uighurs, a Turkic ethnic group. Its people have complained of longstanding oppression under the country's Communist government.
In March, the government banned veils and the growing of long beards -- traditional Muslim customs.
Last year, Xinjiang residents who used foreign messaging apps such as Whatsapp found they had their phone services cut.
Topics Apps & Software Cybersecurity Privacy Politics
Tesla extends battery range for cars in path of Hurricane FlorenceJesse Williams easily demolished Melania Trump's speech on TwitterWatch a livestream of Hurricane Florence bearing down on North CarolinaGerman lawmakers want to require black boxes for autonomous cars, report saysWatch this weatherman dramatically brace himself for FlorenceThis book nerd painted her staircase to look like her favorite booksShannen Doherty shares honest photos of her struggle with breast cancerLyft coupon deal makes getting to and from Emmys parties cheaper9 gifts you can totally borrow from your friends laterLyft coupon deal makes getting to and from Emmys parties cheaperGerman lawmakers want to require black boxes for autonomous cars, report says'A Simple Favor': All the differences between the book and movieOne of the most popular Ethereum apps sure looks like a Ponzi scheme11 totally real earlier drafts of Melania Trump's speechIt's a 2016 love 'Story': Miranda Kerr and Snapchat's Evan Spiegel are engagedIt's a 2016 love 'Story': Miranda Kerr and Snapchat's Evan Spiegel are engaged#SendForgivenessViral proposes new approach to online outrage7 gifts that are way better than thingsFacebook is finally making progress against fake newsAmazon's Storefronts is too little, too late for small businesses The White House contact form now asks for your pronouns Fox News' Shep Smith says Trump throwing 'red meat' to his base over NFL protests Apple might bring back MagSafe to MacBook Air, too 22 facts you never knew about Wikipedia Biden nominates first transgender assistant secretary of health J.K. Rowling has flooded Twitter with otters for all the right reasons 576 border collies gathered together for a borking good time 12 ambient music sources to stream free online Watch first trailer for NBC's Dwayne Johnson sitcom 'Young Rock' Blacklisted by U.S., Xiaomi says it's not a 'Communist Chinese military company' 'Derek DelGaudio's In & Of Itself' on Hulu casts a unique spell Google and Levi's tech Everything you need to know about menstrual discs Police arrest and remove protestors with disabilities at Senate Graham 9 tweets that killed the internet's favorite memes FAA approves first autonomous commercial drones Everything coming to Disney+ in February 2021 Justin Bieber voices support for Black Lives Matter on Instagram #TakeAKnee protests are about police violence, not the military or the Constitution Apple's been sued to remove Telegram from App Store over anti
2.1257s , 10139.203125 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Schoolmistress 2】,Steady Information Network