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Russia introduces QR codes

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-29 22:25

https://meduza.io/en/feature/2020/03/29/muscovites-will-soon-need-qr-codes-to-leave-their-homes

If you have no code permitting you to be in the city, you will get gulaged.

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-29 22:30

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-29 22:47

The best thing is that Russia is using free software in this system.

Linus and Stallman made it possible!

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-30 17:52

based Linus and Stallman.

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-30 20:56

linstallman gentoo

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-31 6:40

>>1
These codes will be reverse engineered in a week.

Name: Anonymous 2020-03-31 20:47

Russian spy app, which every citizen will be forced to install:
https://play.google.com/store/apps/details?id=com.askgps.personaltrackerround

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-01 14:42

Russia is extremely based.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-02 2:59

Russia is so "extremely based" that when US forces killed Russian soldiers in Syria, Tootie Patootin had the option of showing some backbone or backing down like a good little bitch. So he whined a bit in the media with sad puppy eyes, then tucked his tail between his legs and pretended they were Russian mercenaries, and backed the fuck down. Not only did he lose some street cred there, he also lost face to his own generals for being a coward. How "extremely based" indeed.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-02 4:57

>>9
That's 8D chess but you wouldn't understand it.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-02 6:55

8D Dubs

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-02 9:36

8=====D dozen

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-02 19:38

>>10
Taking it up the ass from the US military is 8D chess.
Enjoy polishing your openings.

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-02 20:17

Real world has many more dimensions than 8. In fact every particles adds a dimension.

Name: Real World 2020-04-02 20:36

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 0:57

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-17 1:09

China's coronavirus health code apps raise concerns over privacy


Apps, which allow people to move around after lockdown, have become an integral part of Chinese authorities’ management of citizens


As millions of people in China emerge from weeks of lockdown, their freedom of movement is largely dependent on phone apps.

The “health code” service – run on the ubiquitous platforms Alipay and WeChat and developed for the Chinese government – give users colour-coded designations based on their health status and travel history, and a QR code that can be scanned by authorities.

The apps are specific to each city or province, but generally people given a green code are allowed to travel relatively freely. A yellow code indicates that the holder should be in home isolation, and a red code says the user is a confirmed Covid-19 patient and should be in quarantine.

The apps have become an integral part of Chinese authorities’ management of people and their movements in and out of affected areas. When lockdown restrictions in Hubei province were lifted last week, the government allowed residents with a green code to travel within and out of the province.

Some restaurants, shops, hotels and other establishments ask for patrons to show their codes before entering. In Wuhan, only those with a green health code are allowed to take public transport.

However, the technology has raised concerns about their reach into people’s private lives and data.

There have been complaints by Chinese social media users about a lack of transparency over how the app works and what data it is storing. Some have reported being unable to change erroneous “red” designations, and questioned the reliance on internet connection and surveillance.

“Why should you let companies such as Alipay and WeChat monitor and trace you with the health code?” said one user.

“Can’t it be integrated into the chip of our ID card? And some people’s mobile phones are not connected to the internet. I don’t know what leaders are thinking?”

The apps rely on a combination of self-reporting by the user and government information, including a person’s medical records, their travel history and if they have been in contact with someone diagnosed with Covid-19.

According to screenshots of an English-language version of the Alipay app, applicants are asked for contact and passport details and recent travel, and for relevant medical certification. Ant Financial, an affiliate of Alibaba that operates Alipay, said that it does not provide or operate the service and has no access to the data entered into it. The company said it provided technical support to the Hangzhou city government when it was developing its version of the software.

Official guidelines for the WeChat app say it takes basic identity and address details as well as “the history of close contact with suspected patients, history of travel and residence outside the resident”.

It draws on medical information including “symptoms (such as fever, cough), medical treatment, isolated observation, contact information, travel history of the epidemic area”, and the user’s travel history including the mode of travel and what seat they sat in, and details on the vehicle and its driver.

The health code app, launched in Hangzhou in early February, and described by state media as “Alipay Health code” spread to more than 100 cities within a week before it was rolled out nationally.

Additional reporting by Pei Lin Wu.

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2020/apr/01/chinas-coronavirus-health-code-apps-raise-concerns-over-privacy

Name: Anonymous 2020-04-22 19:29

More Russian regions now require QR passes to leave home
https://www.mk.ru/politics/2020/04/22/cifrovye-propuska-po-koronavirusu-reshil-vvesti-21-region-rossii.html

To get a QR code you must tell government the destination of your travel and its goal. Obviously government can deny you a QR code (just like USA denies visas to potential illegal immigrants), if it considers your goal to be unimportant for it.

So QR codes are like internal visas.

Don't change these.
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