WelcomeUser Guide
ToSPrivacyCanary
DonateBugsLicense

©2025 Poal.co

315

Archive: https://archive.today/MbTiO

From the post:

>China has mastered the craft of policing the internet, operating one of the world’s most extensive online censorship and surveillance regimes. With mandatory identity checks on every online platform, it has become almost impossible for users to stay anonymous. But this rigidly moderated online environment is about to face even stricter controls with the introduction of a state-issued national internet ID. Instead of requiring individuals to submit their personal information for identity checks separately on each platform, the government now seeks to centralize the process by issuing a virtual ID that will allow users to sign in across different social media apps and websites.

Archive: https://archive.today/MbTiO From the post: >>China has mastered the craft of policing the internet, operating one of the world’s most extensive online censorship and surveillance regimes. With mandatory identity checks on every online platform, it has become almost impossible for users to stay anonymous. But this rigidly moderated online environment is about to face even stricter controls with the introduction of a state-issued national internet ID. Instead of requiring individuals to submit their personal information for identity checks separately on each platform, the government now seeks to centralize the process by issuing a virtual ID that will allow users to sign in across different social media apps and websites.

(post is archived)

[–] 2 pts

You know it’s coming here

[–] 0 pt

it is already here, we just do not see it since it does not even need a registration

also, of course cina is doing it, they need to limit all the spying that USA is doing....

we (europeans) do not even perceive the problem

sheeple