China banned millions of people with poor social credit from transportation in 2018

Authored by theverge.com and submitted by GriffonsChainsaw
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China banned people from buying plane or train tickets 23 million times last year because their social credit scores were too low, according to the Associated Press, which obtained a copy of a government report.

The government rolled out the travel ban on people with low social credit scores last May. According to a report from China’s National Public Credit Information Center from last week, people have been blocked 17.5 million times from purchasing airplane tickets, and 5.5 million times from buying high-speed train tickets. These people had become “discredited” for unspecified behavioral crimes. That’s up from only 6.15 million citizens being blocked from taking flights as of 2017, according to China’s supreme court.

The Chinese government plans to create a file for each citizen by 2020

As part of the system, the Chinese government also employs a public blacklist of those who have been found guilty of crimes in court and punishes them partly by limiting their ability to buy plane and train tickets.

Social credit scores are also supposed to help prevent annoying behavior on public transport, such as one case where a passenger who took up another person’s reserved seat and refused to get up. The video of the passenger refusing to budge went viral, with Chinese users calling for more punishment for people who act this way.

The Chinese government has independent policies in place to monitor individuals and punish bad behavior. Your social ranking in the government’s eyes might be lowered if you evade taxes, scam other people, make fake ads, or take up extra seats on the train. Currently, whenever a person passes by a checkpoint, like when crossing into another city, or entering and leaving China, they’re asked for fingerprints and identification already.

Once the files are successfully collected, the hope is that authorities will be able to search for them based on fingerprints and other biometrics. By 2020, China aims to have a file on every Chinese citizen that includes all the data collected on their behavior, according to publicly available government documents translated here.

Correction March 1st, 6:33PM ET: This article has been corrected to reflect that people were blocked 23 million times from buying tickets. It wasn't that 23 million people were blocked. We regret the error.

dele7ed on March 2nd, 2019 at 05:20 UTC »

“Currently, whenever a person passes by a checkpoint, like when crossing into another city ... they’re asked for fingerprints” - the entire country is like one huge compartmented prison.

HalfwayPowerRiot on March 2nd, 2019 at 00:41 UTC »

This is really scary. Near perfectly designed to "downward spiral" any "troublesome" individuals. If your score starts to slip, it'll be harder and harder to recover.

misterbondpt on March 1st, 2019 at 23:59 UTC »

Let's see how the suicide rate is going to be affected.