/
Navigation
C
Chronicles
Browse all articles
C
E
Explore
Semantic exploration
E
R
Research
Entity momentum
R
N
Nexus
Correlations & relationships
N
~
Story Arc
Topic evolution
S
Drift Map
Semantic trajectory animation
D
P
Posts
Analysis & commentary
P
Browse
@
Entities
Companies, people, products, technologies
Domains
Browse by publication source
Handles
Browse by social media handle
Detection
?
Concept Search
Semantic similarity search
!
High Impact Stories
Top coverage by position
+
Sentiment Analysis
Positive/negative coverage
*
Anomaly Detection
Unusual coverage patterns
Analysis
vs
Rivalry Report
Compare two entities head-to-head
/\
Semantic Pivots
Narrative discontinuities
!!
Crisis Response
Event recovery patterns
Connected
Nav: C E R N
Search: /
Command: ⌘K
Embeddings: large
VOICE ARCHIVE

Alexandra Stevenson

@jotted
6 posts
2020-07-07
Biz doesn't think this law will change anything... If an internet company fails to comply to turn over data in cases related to national security, it faces a fine of $13,000 and 6 months in prison for an employee. Police can order internet posts be deleted. https://twitter.com/...
2020-07-07 View on X
Axios

TikTok will pull its app from Google Play and App Store in Hong Kong following a new security law, saying it doesn't and wouldn't share data with China

TikTok said Monday night that it would pull its social video platform out of the Google and Apple app stores in Hong Kong amid a restrictive new law that went into effect last week...

Biz doesn't think this law will change anything... If an internet company fails to comply to turn over data in cases related to national security, it faces a fine of $13,000 and 6 months in prison for an employee. Police can order internet posts be deleted. https://twitter.com/...
2020-07-07 View on X
New York Times

Facebook, Telegram, Google, and Twitter say they have suspended requests for user data from Hong Kong police, following a new national security law by China

Apple is committed to being transparent … Kim Lyons / The Verge : Google, Facebook, and Twitter halt government data requests after new Hong Kong security law Tom Grundy / Hong Kon...

2020-02-04
People from Wuhan — the epicenter of the virus — are being treated like pariahs. Neighbors barricade their doors w/ metal poles, villages expel them, hotels turn them away. One county offered a bounty of $140 for each Wuhan person reported by residents https://www.nytimes.com/...
2020-02-04 View on X
New York Times

Amid virus outbreak, authorities in China are using its vast surveillance network to identify potential carriers, ostracizing even those without the symptoms

The authorities hunt for people from Wuhan, the center of the outbreak, encouraging citizens to inform on others. Tweets: @paulmozur , @sugabelly , @jotted , @amyyqin , and @liyuan...

2019-10-14
Xi's “Study the Great Nation” app that the party pushed aggressively (party & workplaces mandate study sessions, journalists in exchange for press passes) appears to give the CCP “superuser” access to all data on more than 100m mobile phones https://www.washingtonpost.com/ ...
2019-10-14 View on X
Washington Post

Study: the Android version of a Chinese government propaganda app enables authorities to retrieve messages, photos, contacts, and even record audio

Clarification: This article has been updated to clarify that the Cure53 researchers audited only the version of the app available through …

2019-10-13
Xi's “Study the Great Nation” app that the party pushed aggressively (party & workplaces mandate study sessions, journalists in exchange for press passes) appears to give the CCP “superuser” access to all data on more than 100m mobile phones https://www.washingtonpost.com/ ...
2019-10-13 View on X
Washington Post

Study: Xuexi Qiangguo, a propaganda app developed by China's Communist Party, enables authorities to retrieve messages, photos, contacts, and even record audio

BEIJING — The Chinese Communist Party appears to have “superuser” access to all the data on more than 100 million cellphones …

2019-09-24
As a growing number of foreign companies bend to Beijing's rules and apologize to Chinese citizens, here's a look at the cudgel the Communist Party now has in its arsenal to keep the business world in line. W/ ⁦@paulmozur⁩ https://www.nytimes.com/...
2019-09-24 View on X
New York Times

China's social credit system extends to businesses, with 33M recently rated; some US firms were warned ratings may be affected by their stances, like on Taiwan

including court decisions, payroll data, environmental records, copyright violations, even how many employees are members of the Communist Party — and using it to grade businesses ...