Who needs democracy when you have data?
Here’s how China rules using data, AI, and internet surveillance.
by Christina Larson
Aug 20, 2018
In 1955, science fiction writer Isaac Asimov published a short story
about an experiment in “electronic democracy,” in which a single
citizen, selected to represent an entire population, responded to
questions generated by a computer named Multivac. The machine took
this data and calculated the results of an election that therefore
never needed to happen. Asimov’s story was set in Bloomington,
Indiana, but today an approximation of Multivac is being built in
China.
For any authoritarian regime, “there is a basic problem for the
center of figuring out what’s going on at lower levels and across
society,” says Deborah Seligsohn, a political scientist and China
expert at Villanova University in Philadelphia. How do you
effectively govern a country that’s home to one in five people on
the planet, with an increasingly complex economy and society, if you
don’t allow public debate, civil activism, and electoral feedback?
How do you gather enough information to actually make decisions? And
how does a government that doesn’t invite its citizens to
participate still engender trust and bend public behavior without
putting police on every doorstep?
Hu Jintao, China’s leader from 2002 to 2012, had attempted to solve
these problems by permitting a modest democratic thaw, allowing
avenues for grievances to reach the ruling class. His successor, Xi
Jinping, has reversed that trend. Instead, his strategy for
understanding and responding to what is going on in a nation of 1.4
billion relies on a combination of surveillance, AI, and big data to
monitor people’s lives and behavior in minute detail.
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continua qui: https://www.technologyreview.com/s/611815/who-needs-democracy-when-you-have-data/