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Speaker describes digitally verified ID and its growth in China. In China, a traffic camera can catch you jaywalking, and the digital ID system has your blood, genetic code, and photograph, plus it can identify how you walk. So even without a visible face, you can be picked up by gate. It will convict you of jaywalking and take money out of your bank account with no intermediating judiciary at all and show a picture of you to the people in the neighborhood, so they know that you have jaywalked and reduce your social credit score. If your social credit score falls below a certain level, then you can't you can't buy drinks from a vending machine. You can't play video games. You can't go on a train. You can't get out of your fifteen minute city. All that's already in place in China. Do you think that that's that would be helpful or unhelpful? It would be I think it would bring in and has already in China. I think it'll bring in a totalitarian tyranny. So 100% complete that it would make George Orwell's 1984 look like a picnic.

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I believe the privacy of people in this country is being violated. Elon Musk and Trump are taking all of our private information, and we have no idea what information they possess.

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In China, if caught jaywalking by a traffic camera, the digital ID system with your blood, genetic code, and photo can identify you by your walk. It convicts you, deducts money from your bank account, and publicly shames you, lowering your social credit score. A low score restricts buying drinks, playing games, riding trains, or leaving your city. This system is already in place in China.

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I believe the privacy of the people in this country is being violated. Elon Musk and Donald Trump are taking all of our private information, and we have no idea what information they possess. We don't know the extent of their knowledge about our personal lives.

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Speaker 0 argues that for many years, dating back to the 1990s, looking at China today reveals what might be planned for the West tomorrow. In particular, China has millions of cameras in the cities equipped with facial recognition technology, enabling them to locate you in minutes wherever you are. This system operates alongside a social credit framework: people earn points for behaviors that align with the government’s preferences and lose points for actions that don’t. If you lose enough credits, you are excluded from mainstream society. The speaker notes that during the COVID-19 period, people who refused to get the jab or to wear masks were excluded from mainstream society, describing that as a pre-run or preview of where society could be headed. The argument is that, in China, losing enough credits means you cannot board trains or planes and you cannot function within mainstream society. The speaker contends that this social credit system is rapidly moving into the West, facilitated by digital identity, digital currency, and AI-driven control over many aspects of life. The transcript highlights examples of ongoing surveillance- and control-related measures in Western contexts, such as supermarkets that require a QR code for entry. It questions what happens to those who do not want to participate in such a system, asking what if someone doesn’t have a smartphone. It notes that in some cases, entry to places like supermarkets could be denied if you lack the required digital credentials. The speaker also points out that payments might be made with a fingerprint, indicating that this is part of a broader shift toward pervasive digital and biometric controls. Overall, the speaker presents a narrative in which China’s social credit and pervasive surveillance serve as a template for Western adoption, suggesting a future where digital IDs, digital currencies, AI governance, and biometric verification create a tightly controlled social order, with access to everyday activities and services contingent on compliance with the system.

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The speaker discusses the growing collaboration between government and corporations in restricting individual freedoms. They highlight China's extensive surveillance system and social credit system as examples of this control. The speaker warns that Western societies are heading in a similar direction due to technological advancements and the desire for security. They emphasize the dangers of digital identity, surveillance, and manipulation by both corporations and governments. The potential for a surveillance state and loss of personal autonomy is a significant concern.

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"the level of power in terms of surveillance and data mining and the power over your life has never been as Orwellian as it is now." And with AI and all of these models, it's even going to get more intrusive. "it's their capability to literally be gods, to literally know what you're thinking, what you fear, what you want, your desires, all of these things, having all your data, knowing everything you do, knowing how fast your heart is beating." "This is the precursor to, you know, a social credit score." Mhmm. "A digital kind of police state." And that it's being done under the guise of security that you will be safer. Peter Thiel is giving a four part lecture on the antichrist. "Yeah." "Four parts." "Tickets sold out." "It's a private lecture at a club in San Francisco about the Antichrist."

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Smart devices and wireless networks are connecting everything from lights to cars, promising safety and convenience. However, there is a darker side to this technology. Our streets, mobile phones, and cities are spying on us, setting us up to be tracked and monitored. By surrendering our data, we are giving away the ability to control our behavior, leading to a social credit score. Central Bank digital currencies will further restrict our spending, and digital IDs will become mandatory, already being implemented in Australia, Canada, Scotland, and other countries. Without a digital ID, we will lose access to government services, travel, healthcare, and the internet. Australians are unknowingly heading towards a dystopian digital future.

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Your phone is not just a phone. It is the result of research that captures your attention, creating a power imbalance where you are unaware that you are being constantly monitored. They gather maximum information about you, surveilling you 24/7. In return, they know you so well that they can not only predict things about you but also manipulate your behavior. The internet of things will do the same.

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A man was locked out of his smart home because his smart device detected audio it deemed racist. This incident highlights the power of smart devices and terms of service agreements, as they can restrict access to our homes. In Australia, a politician warns that smart cities equipped with face recognition, cameras, and license plate readers will enable constant tracking of individuals. Additionally, with the introduction of centralized bank digital currencies, our spending will require approval, potentially leading to exclusion from government services, healthcare, vacations, and the internet. This could result in a new form of societal exclusion resembling gulags.

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The speaker discusses a growing social credit-like system controlled by algorithms. If a person’s family photos, online activities, purchases, associations, or friends diverge from what authorities expect, they can lose the ability to buy train tickets, board airplanes, obtain a passport, or be eligible for a job, including government work. These constraints are increasingly created, programmed, and decided by algorithms. These algorithms are fueled by data our devices produce constantly and invisibly. The records we generate are not just visible content but often unseen traces, such as location and activity footprints. The speaker emphasizes that our devices create records that we do not see, which aggregate into a comprehensive picture of individuals. Even when the content of communications isn’t visible, metadata reveals much. The government and other actors claim they do not need a warrant to collect metadata, yet it tells a complete story about a person’s life. Activity records are continually created, shared, collected, and intercepted by both companies and governments. As these records are sold and traded, the speaker argues that what is being sold is not merely information but people themselves. They claim that companies and governments are selling “us”—our future, our past, our history, and our identity. In doing so, they assert that these entities are eroding personal power and making individual stories work for them. Overall, the message is that everyday data—seemingly innocent day-to-day traces—are aggregated into powerful profiles. These profiles determine access to travel, work, and official status, and the data economy is framed as commodifying and leveraging individuals’ identities. The core assertion is that the modern data ecosystem constructs a pervasive power dynamic where people’s histories and identities are exploited to control and monetize them, while the actual content of private communications may be less visible than the broader metadata that shapes life opportunities.

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Stories, even if fictional, are the engine of history because they enable large-scale collaboration. Science, as an institution, is not about truth but about power. Those who own the data own the future. We are reaching a point where biological knowledge and computing power enable the systematic hacking of millions of people. To hack people means to know them better than they know themselves. Total surveillance regimes are emerging, such as in Xinjiang and the occupied territories. It's amazing how few soldiers are needed to control millions of people if you have the data.

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The speaker explains that hacking millions of people only requires access to their data, allowing others to know individuals better than they know themselves. This poses a threat to democracy and free markets, as it enables manipulation and prediction of people's actions. Total surveillance regimes, like those seen in Xinjiang and the occupied territories of Israel, are emerging, where a small number of soldiers can control millions of people with the help of data.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss the UK government’s rollout of a national digital ID, presenting it as imminent and not merely a future possibility. Speaker 0 states that the government is rolling out a national digital ID in the UK and asserts it is happening now, not something to consider for someday. Speaker 1 reinforces the opposition to digital ID, urging a rejection of it. Speaker 0 reports that they are outside BBC Broadcasting House for a digital ID protest, framing the event as a mobilization against the rollout. Speaker 1 warns that saying yes to digital ID could lead to an inability to say no to the government ever again, not just to the current government but to future ones unknown. Speaker 0 recalls assurances that national ID cards were dead and not representative of Britain, noting that the modern version is not a plastic card but a “live connection.” Speaker 1 calls on people to raise their heads out of complacency, asserting that humans are not data and emphasizing that the issue concerns everyone’s freedom. Speaker 0 contends that what is happening is an attempt to funnel humanity into being a number, implying a loss of individuality. Speaker 1 describes a future where the ability to earn, move, buy, or speak is not a right but a permission, and permissions can be switched off, framing this as a consequence of Digital ID. Speaker 0 summarizes the topic as Digital ID: how it started, how it is being sold, and what life looks like behind a biometric paper.

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Anything you've ever said or done in the vicinity of your phone's camera or microphone, everything you've ever put into your phone, emails, text messages, Snapchat, Twitter, whatever, You search queries on Google, every embarrassing health search, every embarrassing text conversation with the significant other, every nude photograph people may not have taken, any search. They know where you are at all times. They know where you go and when. They know what you buy. They have access to your bank account. AI will literally know everything about you. They can create fake platforms that look real or rather fake people. And imagine if they were talking to you and they passed the Turing test, you know it's AI. It's like total, like, rape of everybody by the system forever. It's not good.

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The conversation centers on fears of evolving toward a biometric surveillance state driven by predictive algorithms. Speaker 0 argues that the plan resembles a transition to mass surveillance on everybody, drawing on observations from a recent trip to China where some aspects were acceptable but others were not, and contrasts that with potential consequences in the speakers’ own country—specifically, “without the nice trains and without the free healthcare.” The core concern is the creation of a biometric surveillance framework that uses predictive analytics to monitor and control people. A key point raised is a new report that highlights contracts with Palantir, the data analytics company, which would “create data profiles of Americans to surveil and harass them.” This claim emphasizes the potential domestic use of technologies and methodologies that have been associated with counterterrorism efforts abroad. The discussion frames this as evidence that the United States could be adopting similar surveillance capabilities at home. Speaker 1 responds with a blend of agreement and critical tone, underscoring the perceived inevitability of this trajectory and hinting at the burdens of being right about such developments, including the intellectual burden of grappling with the math and ontology behind these systems. The exchange suggests that Palantir’s role is to “disrupt and make our the institutions we partner with the very best in the world” and to be prepared to “scare enemies and on occasion kill them.” This is presented as part of Palantir’s stated mission, with Speaker 1 affirming a sense of inevitability about the path forward. Speaker 0 further reframes the issue by stating that “the enemy is literally the American people,” expressing alarm at the idea that the same company tracking terrorists abroad would “now be tracking us at home.” They note posting on social media that this development should be very alarming, highlighting the notion that the entity responsible for foreign surveillance might be extending its reach domestically. Overall, the dialogue juxtaposes concerns about a domestic biometric surveillance state—enabled by predictive algorithms and proprietary data profiling by Palantir—with ethical and political anxieties about the implications for civil liberties, accountability, and the potential normalization of surveillance within the United States. The conversation dismisses no specific claims but emphasizes the perceived transformation of surveillance capabilities from foreign counterterrorism into internal population monitoring.

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Speaker 0 describes a view that the last mission of the Freemasons to achieve their world vision is creating AI, and that this will occur at thirty three degrees north of the equator—in Jerusalem. He claims this is the end game, with the Freemasons aiming to create a world government in Jerusalem, and identifies the center of this world government as Solomon's Temple, Silicon Valley, and AI. He asserts that currently AI like ChatGPT “doesn’t really do anything,” producing only cool images and helping students cheat, and notes that if you don’t go to school you might not see much value in using ChatGPT or paying for it. He contrasts this with the global investment in data centers, noting that “everyone’s putting money into AI,” but questions how to make money from AI if the goal is using it directly, suggesting that creating an AI surveillance state would be more financially sensible. Speaker 0 then explains what a surveillance state is, citing China as an example with digital ID and digital currency, where “everything you buy, everything you do will be tracked.” He says this allows the creation of a profile on individuals that reveals who they are, how they behave, and what they think, and that the government can manipulate thinking and behavior. He ties this to a religious frame by stating that such a surveillance state is “the mark of the beast.” He concludes by identifying Package three d k as a global AI surveillance system.

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I believe the people of this country are being violated because our privacy is being taken by people like Elon Musk and Trump. We don't know what information they possess about us.

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Speaker 0 argues that facial recognition will be used to unlock your digital identity, which will be a tool of control for upcoming agendas. Speaker 1 notes that elements of this control are already with us, citing Alexa as an example. Speaker 0 contends you are never alone in your home, because all devices and smart appliances are connected on a wireless network, many with cameras and microphones, monitoring everything all the time. Smart appliances communicate with the smart meter, sending real-time usage data. If a Ring camera is in the home, a mesh network is formed and all devices are being tracked within the home, including location and usage, with data going to Amazon’s servers. Speaker 1 adds that when you leave your home, modern vehicles are connected to the Internet and tracked continually. On the streets, smart LED poles and smart LED lights form a wireless network that track your vehicle. They claim data is collected 24/7 continuously on every human being within these wireless networks. Speaker 0 asserts this is not good for health due to electromagnetic radiation. Speaker 0 further states that in the long term the plan is to lock up humanity in smart cities, a super set of a fifteen minute city. Speaker 1 says they’ve sold smart cities to state and local governments and countries as about sustainability and the city’s good, but claims the language from the UN and WEF and their white papers is inverted. The monitoring is described as about limiting mobility and no car ownership. Surveillance via LED grid is described as why smart lighting is death. Water management is about water rationing; noise pollution about speed surveillance; traffic monitoring about limiting mobility; energy conservation about rationing heat, electricity, and gasoline. Speaker 0 explains geofencing as an invisible fence around you where you cannot go beyond a certain point, related to face recognition, digital identity, and access control. Speaker 1 mentions that smart contracts can enable Softbrick to turn off your digital currency beyond a certain point from your house. The world is described as turned into a digital panopticon. Speaker 0 concludes that this means you can be monitored, analyzed, managed, and monetized.

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They have complete access to your device and can manipulate it as they please. Although you technically own the device because you paid for it, corporations and governments are gaining more control over it. We are living in a world where we bear the burden of work, taxes, and expenses, yet our ownership diminishes. The previous generation is acutely aware of this reality.

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You don't need a mandatory digital ID to live your life, travel, or buy things. The push for a global digital ID is driven by those who want to monitor your every move and control your actions. With a managed security digital ID, authorities can use excuses like a viral pandemic to enforce vaccinations or restrict your movements. Central bank digital currencies eliminate the need for traditional banks and allow for precise tracking of your purchases and interactions. Algorithms could be used to limit your access to goods based on distance or other criteria. The control of this database and its algorithms could be in the hands of malicious individuals, making it impossible to resist their restrictions. This loss of freedom is unacceptable.

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"Are we just becoming China? Is that the plan here, just mass surveillance on everybody? Because recently, I was just in China, and some of what I saw was pretty good. We're talking about the creation of a biometric surveillance state with predictive algorithms. A new report shines light on contracts with tech company Palantir which would create data profiles of Americans to surveil and harass them. 'Palantir is here to disrupt and make our the institutions we partner with the very best in the world and when it's necessary to scare enemies and on occasion kill them.' 'Except here, the enemy is literally the American people. I tweeted this out the other day saying that it should be very alarming that the same company that's tracking terrorists abroad is now tracking us at home. Starting to feel like maybe they think we're the enemy. What are your thoughts?'"

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Speaker 0 asserts that the control grid arrived in America via Apple, stating they worked for Apple for seventeen years and still hold stock, so they find no joy in revealing this. They claim there are no good guys here and argue that we need to shut it down while we can. They state that Apple just rolled out digital ID integration and acknowledge it sounds convenient, but warn that every convenience has a price. According to them, once identity goes digital, it becomes programmable, and once programmable, it becomes controllable. They contend that individuals are handing over their entire identity wrapped in a product, a file that can easily be deleted. If one does not comply, access is lost; if opinions are not liked, accounts are frozen. They claim that stepping out of line results in travel restrictions, bank transfer blocks, and loss of benefits. They insist this is not speculation and that it is already live. Examples are offered to illustrate the claim: Thailand has programmable digital currency; Europe introduced biometric wallets; Canada froze accounts during protests; China is described as having started the pilot and now in full production mode with a live social credit system. They assert that China is secretly building the infrastructure at a global level right now, not through laws or force, but through updates and convenience. They claim that in Vietnam, 86,000,000 bank accounts were deleted because people wouldn’t agree to a digital ID. Concerning the European Union, they state that by 2027, large cash payments will be outlawed, forcing people onto digital rails that can be controlled. They describe this as just the on ramp, arguing that freedom becomes conditional when identity is controlled by a corporation or a government that can revoke it with a keystroke. They describe the arrival of dystopia as occurring not with tanks or force, but with app updates or convenience. They conclude by urging listeners to pay attention and push back while they still can. The message ends with an appeal to “Let’s go,” emphasizing urgency to resist the rollout of digital identity and programmable control embedded in convenient updates and services.

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Speaker 0 and Speaker 1 discuss the motivations behind expanding digital surveillance, warning that concerns go beyond merely watching current behavior. Speaker 1 argues that many surveillance actors are interested in predictive analytics and predictive policing, not just monitoring present actions. Based on current and past behavior, these systems aim to determine future actions, and in predictive policing could lead to court-ordered treatment or house arrest to prevent crimes before they occur. They reference PredPol (later rebranded) as a notable example, describing it as less accurate than a coin toss and noting that people were deprived of liberty due to an dangerously flawed algorithm. They also point to facial recognition algorithms in the UK, which have been shown to be hugely inaccurate, yet vendors remain unchanged despite demonstrated inaccuracies. The underlying concern is that constant surveillance could induce obedience, since any potential future action could be used against a person, even if they are not currently doing anything wrong. The speakers quote Larry Ellison of Oracle at an Oracle shareholder meeting, who allegedly said that surveillance will record everything and citizens will be on their best behavior because they “have to,” effectively linking surveillance to governance over behavior. Speaker 0 adds that Donald Trump’s circle includes tech figures who are not friends of freedom and liberty, naming Larry Ellison as leading that faction, which amplifies the concern about the direction of policy and governance under such influence. Speaker 1 broadens the critique to globalist networks, noting that many players in surveillance and tech also appear on the steering committee of the Bilderberg Group, a closed-door forum often associated with global policy coordination. They argue that some individuals in this network have attempted to frame libertarian rhetoric while pursuing oligarchic aims, including the idea that “the free market is for losers” and that monopolies are the path to wealth. The discussion emphasizes that the same actors may push policies under the banner of efficiency or libertarian appeal, especially as AI advances, and that vigilance is necessary to prevent a slide toward pervasive, technocratic governance. Speaker 1 concludes that, with AI and related technologies, the risk is that these strategies could be packaged and sold in a way that appeals to factions who opposed such policies in the past, making public vigilance crucial to prevent a repeat of dystopian outcomes.

TED

What you need to know about face surveillance | Kade Crockford
Guests: Kade Crockford
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Privacy is not dead; it is about control over personal information. The belief that people don’t care about privacy is a myth, as evidenced by common practices like using passwords and curtains. Technologies like face surveillance threaten freedom by enabling total surveillance of public movements without oversight. The ACLU advocates for bans on such technologies, emphasizing that privacy is essential for a free society. Communities are successfully pushing back against government surveillance, asserting that we must shape our future and protect our freedoms.
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