How Oracle Sells Repression in China (theintercept.com) 97
In its bid for TikTok, Oracle was supposed to prevent data from being passed to Chinese police. Instead, it's been marketing its own software for their surveillance work. From a report: Police in China's Liaoning province were sitting on mounds of data collected through invasive means: financial records, travel information, vehicle registrations, social media, and surveillance camera footage. To make sense of it all, they needed sophisticated analytic software. Enter American business computing giant Oracle, whose products could find relevant data in the police department's disparate feeds and merge it with information from ongoing investigations. So explained a China-based Oracle engineer at a developer conference at the company's California headquarters in 2018. Slides from the presentation, hosted on Oracle's website, begin with a "case outline" listing four Oracle "product[s] used" by Liaoning police to "do criminal analysis and prediction." One slide shows Oracle software enabling Liaoning police to create network graphs based on hotel registrations and track down anyone who might be linked to a given suspect.
Another shows the software being used to build a police dashboard and create "security case heat map[s]." Apparent pictures of the software interface show a blurred face and various Chinese names. The concluding slide states that the software helped police, whose datasets had been "incomprehensible," more easily "trace the key people/objects/events" and "identify potential suspect[s]" -- which in China often means dissidents. Oracle representatives have marketed the company's data analytics for use by police and security industry contractors across China, according to dozens of company documents hosted on its website. In at least two cases, the documents imply that provincial departments used the software in their operations. One is the slideshow story about Liaoning province. The other is an Oracle document describing police in Shanxi province as a "client" in need of an intelligence platform. Oracle also boasted that its data security services were used by other Chinese police entities, according to the documents -- including police in Xinjiang, the site of a genocide against Muslim Uyghurs and other ethnic groups. In marketing materials, Oracle said that its software could help police leverage information from online comments, investigation records, hotel registrations, license plate information, DNA databases, and images for facial recognition. Oracle presentations even suggested that police could use its products to combine social media activity with dedicated Chinese government databases tracking drug users and people in the entertainment industry, a group that includes sex workers. Oracle employees also promoted company technology for China's "Police Cloud," a big data platform implemented as part of the emerging surveillance state.
Another shows the software being used to build a police dashboard and create "security case heat map[s]." Apparent pictures of the software interface show a blurred face and various Chinese names. The concluding slide states that the software helped police, whose datasets had been "incomprehensible," more easily "trace the key people/objects/events" and "identify potential suspect[s]" -- which in China often means dissidents. Oracle representatives have marketed the company's data analytics for use by police and security industry contractors across China, according to dozens of company documents hosted on its website. In at least two cases, the documents imply that provincial departments used the software in their operations. One is the slideshow story about Liaoning province. The other is an Oracle document describing police in Shanxi province as a "client" in need of an intelligence platform. Oracle also boasted that its data security services were used by other Chinese police entities, according to the documents -- including police in Xinjiang, the site of a genocide against Muslim Uyghurs and other ethnic groups. In marketing materials, Oracle said that its software could help police leverage information from online comments, investigation records, hotel registrations, license plate information, DNA databases, and images for facial recognition. Oracle presentations even suggested that police could use its products to combine social media activity with dedicated Chinese government databases tracking drug users and people in the entertainment industry, a group that includes sex workers. Oracle employees also promoted company technology for China's "Police Cloud," a big data platform implemented as part of the emerging surveillance state.
If you expect morals from for-profit organizations (Score:5, Insightful)
...you're gonna have a bad time!
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Really, business is business
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We have a word for companies like Oracle: 'collaborators'. Enabling evil acts makes you an accessory to evil acts.
Seriously you China shills need to be rooted out and banned from commenting in places like this. You cannot honestly defend the sorts of human
Re: If you expect morals from for-profit organiza (Score:1)
Didn't say they were doing nothing. They aren't doing anything we haven't ourselves done before. From the trail of tears to the Red Scare, this is all already been done by America.
Anyone with any emotional intelligence would see through your fear mongering which is exactly what this article is because it in no way discusses a potential solution. instead you try to destroy civil discussion because I as an American enjoy my life more in China. Also, it's illegal in China for employers to record voice in a w
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Re: If you expect morals from for-profit organizat (Score:4, Insightful)
What you have just written is an excellent indictment of corporatism. They are doing what they are expected to do as a public corporation, and that is to say they are doing evil for profit.
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In the US they are.
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No, they are not. They have some of the rights of humans but none of the responsibilities.
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"Corporations are people, my friend!" - Mitt Romney.
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Indeed, and he was the ideal Republican presidential candidate, embodying all the weirdness that they support.
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Re: If you expect morals from for-profit organiza (Score:2)
The profit is not the evil part.
What they are doing for profit is.
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You seem to be reframing. Drinkypoo did NOT claim that profit is evil. He said that Oracle is doing evil for profit. There exist other things they could do for profit that are not evil.
As for the rest, no. I don't find it at all problematic to demand ethical and moral behavior from people we do business with. No good will come from allowing sociopaths (even law abiding ones) to run commerce and government.
Also note that there is a difference between accepting money from an ethically questionable entity to h
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Really, if you want to obstruct China's data collection and analysis I would have trouble thinking of a more efficient way to do so than letting Oracle totally mangle the data. I'd speculate that could be the reason for allowing Oracle to sell its services to China, but I'm not sure anyone in Foggy Bottom or Langley is that bright.
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In the US, they are.
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Corporations are run by people. Those people have ethical obligations. If corporate personhood as recognized in the U.S. legal system is valid, then it is also valid to extend those ethical obligations to corporations.
Other way around, if the personal ethical obligations of the people running corporations do not extend to the corporation itself, then neither do any of their rights and freedoms. That is, corporations have no speech at all, cannot own anything, cannot exist basically.
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That's pretty much the case [youtu.be] when it comes to guns. Software and other less fungible product, maybe not so much.
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Lots of unethical things are legal. You don't actually have to set your bar that low.
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Re: If you expect morals from for-profit organizat (Score:3)
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Seems like half the people commenting on this topic would be perfectly fine with that because what'dya expect they're a corporation and business is business. These guys are actually worse than politicians.
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It's almost as if you were brain washed.
Pot, meet kettle.
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I would suggest that you look at the original customer for Larry Ellison and why the database is called Oracle
Typical (Score:1)
Oracle would sell it's own children if it turned a profit.
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You're just another flavor of paid China shill aren't you? Your tactical plan: convince the Americans that they're not fundamentally different than China.
Eat shit and die, that's complete and total bullshit.
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In most cases, the United States is fundamentally different from China. That being said, you should not be surprised to know that there are plenty of people in the United States that would like to change that fact.
The first thing I thought of when I saw Oracle hawking their analytics software to the CCP was: "hmm I'll bet law enforcement agencies in the US getting Amazon Ring data would love this crap". Then I realized that they're probably already buying similar software.
Overall I'd say it's more importa
Don't feel bad if you were funding this (Score:4, Insightful)
Paying for and using Oracle software is its own punishment.
Not only in China (Score:2)
Agreed that using Oracle's software is its own form of repression.
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What did we expact? (Score:1)
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What, is he bored flying his MIG around his private island in Hawaii already?
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Not related to tiktok (Score:4, Informative)
In its bid for TikTok, Oracle was supposed to prevent data from being passed to Chinese police. Instead, it's been marketing its own software for their surveillance work
But this is not "instead". TikTok data has nothing to do with what this article is about. Please change "Instead" to "Meanwhile" or "At the same time" or similar.
Re: Not related to tiktok (Score:2)
The article is pure shit. Prejudice and spin with virtually nothing meaningful. It reads like someone trying to slander a competitors as.
Re: Not related to tiktok (Score:2)
ad
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The hard choice: (Score:2)
Commies want CommieWare and somebody will end up providing it. So the question is, should we allow US firms to bid on such, or ban them from selling it, leaving the market to foreign firms?
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There are plenty of conservatives that would have (and did) restrict American businesses from doing business with the USSR during the Cold War.
Re: The hard choice: (Score:3)
Bingo. The question the authors should of posed and discussed. Instead, the whole piece reads like a SJW rant with basically everything being said bitterly obvious for anyone who understands "business ethics" or the lack thereof
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So the question is, should we allow US firms to bid on such, or ban them
Clinton (Mr.) gave China MFN status in the 90's and hell will freeze over before Biden Inc. takes it away, so you're question is moot. US companies will continue selling themselves out to China for the foreseeable future.
Enjoy. You voted for it. Many times over many decades.
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It appears you didn't address the question. What should US policy be for such? It's clear you don't like the current policy, but it's good practice to have an alternative prepared before griping. Work 101.
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have an alternative
There is no alternative; our Western establishment is bought and paid for by China. Nothing that happens during the remainder of your lifetime will run counter to Chinese prerogatives. They're conducting the official whitewash of COVID-19 on behalf of China as we 'speak.' No one is going to trouble China or Oracle about how they use software from US companies.
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Are you people
On one hand I have chuckleheads like you, on the other I have reality, where our newly elected Chinese puppet is handwaving human rights violations in Xinjiang and Hong Kong and saber rattling over Taiwan as 'different cultural norms.'
I'm going with reality. You can go screw.
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From which planet?
Great Business Plan Oracle! (Score:2)
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Selling the Chinese your software makes much better business sense that having them infringe on your intellectual property. I applaud Larry for his salesmanship!
Works great until China invents a "look a like" system that doesn't infringe Oracles patents. cough cough They will won't pay Larry's license fees for long.
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Then they'll figure out what a clusterfuck of a system they've just stolen and dump it as the useless pile of outdated garbage that it is.
I've been involved in a number of fairly large database projects over the years, two of them were Oracle and both were multi-year multi-million dollar fiascos. One was replaced by Informix and the other by SQL Server.
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(Yes I know you're being sarcastic, I'm being sarcastic right back)
Re: Wait... Repression in China?? (Score:1)
I've been there to xinjiang, and interacted with them, visited their many mosques and seen them praying etc.
Does your experience of them there, living their lives seemingly quite happily, differ from mine?
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They're still better than our wonderful allies Saudi Arabia or Israel.
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. . . no, they aren't. And in Saudi Arabia's case, that's saying something.
Paradox of progress (Score:3)
Criminals will use any tech available to them, including dark web, end to end encryption, ransomware, deepfakes, armed drones, even nukes/dirty bombs if they can get a hold of these. In general, we want police to win over criminals. Even in oppressive countries like China there are lots of common criminals and would be terrorists that we don't want to operate with impunity. And trying to keep tech out of hands of criminals doesn't work and hurts law abiding citizens and businesses that need same technology for benign reasons.
So I don't see any way out of also giving police access to cutting edge tech - mining of publicly available and voluntarily provided data, surveillance and armed drones, jetpacks - to even out the odds. It's spooky and dangerous, but criminals are spooky and dangerous too.
Maybe humankind can only survive through space exploration because we are too stupid and irresponsible to all be around each other. We can't resist developing dangerous stuff just because we can, or using it for crimes, or abusing authority to stop crimes.
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Re: Paradox of progress (Score:1)
Why do you have trouble trusting the Chinese?
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Do you have a surge of trust towards Chinese mafia? Maybe a version of MAD is the only thing that will keep both honest-ish?
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I think that is a sound argument.
A problem is that if the government ends up having overwhelming power, then the smartest criminals will need to take over the government.
In other words, if you don't want nasty dictators to get into power, don't give the government the kinds of powers which nasty dictators crave.
And by nasty dictators I mean like those german guys which Indiana Jobes hates (Slashdot filter seems to not like their name).
Knowing Oracle ... (Score:2)
How Oracle Sells Repression in China
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He sold influence.
Other countries (Score:2)
Anyone remember Total Information Awareness: The USA plan to have police inspect everything online and be able to track a person's every breath? China's "police cloud" isn't different to what other countries are doing: For example, the US 'no fly' list. China is just labelling more people as "potential suspect[s]".
One can be very confident that Oracle sold this to the US government first.
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Re: Other countries (Score:2)
> China is just labelling more people as "potential suspect[s]".
That's quite an assumption.
American military (Score:2)
Oracle's name change to ... (Score:1)
... horracle.
Is Capitalism bad for the communists? (Score:1)