Wednesday 14 November 2018

Nick Tsagaris – Chinese Cities Enforce Their own Versions of The Social Credit System to Target Issues in Their Area

Irresponsible dog owners, unethical doctors, and dishonest e-commerce vendors are being punished and kept in check under a series of evolving, local credit scoring systems being rolled out across China.
Just three days before China’s record Singles Day sales this week, an alliance of online shopping platforms — including global giant Alibaba — implemented a credit system to punish untrustworthy sellers in eastern Zhejiang province.
The new alliance is set to work in conjunction with the provincial social ranking system, a localised version of the mandatory national Social Credit System (SCS) that is geared at monitoring the behaviour of China’s 1.4 billion citizens.
While the SCS is due to be fully operational nationwide by 2020, a wide array of social scoring systems are already being tested by local governments at provincial and city levels.
Forty-one cities and 31 provinces across China even have their own platforms stemming from the national SCS platform, officially titled: Credit China.
But it’s still unclear at this stage whether the localised social credit scores for citizens will be shared with or rolled into the national-level credit reporting platforms.

Dog owners docked all 12 points will lose their pets

In Jinan, a city in eastern Shandong province, authorities have rolled out a credit scoring system to enforce responsible dog ownership.
After enforcing the system in January last year, recently released figures show some 1430 owners have been penalised, with more than 120 temporarily surrendering their beloved pooch after losing all their points, according to a CCTV news article on Jinan’s SCS website.
Just like an Australian driver’s licence, the pet demerit system gives every registered dog owner a licence with 12 points, and penalises owners for every infraction.
First-time offenders who walked their dog without a leash or tag, or didn’t clean up after their pet, or were reported for a disturbance, were docked three points.
Second-time offenders were fined 200 to 500 yuan ($40 to $100) and penalised six points, and those offending for a third time would lose all 12 points and be forced to surrender their dog, the provincial SCS website states.
Meanwhile, pet owners who failed to renew their dog registration every year would also have their dog temporarily taken to a kennel until they passed an exam on dog-keeping regulations.
A China Daily report published this year said complaints about owners walking dogs without a leash dropped by 43 per cent as a result of the credit system, while state media Legal Daily commended the “effectiveness” of the system and argued for it to be rolled out across the country.
In eastern Zhejiang province — widely known as China’s e-commerce hub — a similar local credit scoring system was adopted last week to keep online vendors in check just days before the record sales on Singles Day.
According to Credit China, a dozen online shopping platforms last Thursday established a “dishonesty disciplinary alliance” to punish bad behaviour — such as selling fake goods — by blocking and deleting vendor accounts, and excluding users from promotional activities.
The alliance said it would also work with the Zhejiang Administration Bureau for Industry and Commerce to penalise negative behaviour by deducting individuals’ points.

‘The social credit system itself is an evolving concept’

Maya Wang, a senior researcher from Human Rights Watch China, said the “social credit system itself is an evolving concept”, though different aspects of the system have become slightly clearer over time.
She added that at the national level, the SCS appeared to be a straight-up blacklisting system rather than a point-based demerit system.
“Then you have the local systems which are diverging from each other and from the national version,” she said.
“EACH CITY OR LOCALE SEEMS TO TAKE THE IDEA OF A SOCIAL CREDIT AND POINT SYSTEM AND KIND OF RUN WITH IT.”
Samantha Hoffman, an independent consultant on Chinese state security, said local governments and ministries had separate social credit implementing regulations, pilot programs, and credit reporting platforms based on the 2014-2020 Planning Outline for the Construction of a Social Credit System.
“There is not a standardised national-level credit system, but there are national-level credit reporting platforms,” she said.
“In theory, credit data from the various platforms [like Jinan’s pet reporting platform] should eventually be shared with other credit platforms [like the national Credit China platform].”

‘You could be sanctioned everywhere’

Ms Wang said that in general, there seemed to be a movement towards increasing regulations and laws to control people’s behaviour in China.
In Foshan, a city in central Guangdong Province with 400,000 shared bikes, authorities are having discussions about punishing inconsiderate bike riders through the local social credit system.
And in Suzhou, a city west of Shanghai, authorities introduced a system that penalises doctors who fail to follow the regulations, such as misusing antibiotics, accepting bribery, and selling organs or blood.
But Ms Wang said the idea of awarding and deducting points for regulatory infractions wasn’t completely new.
“For the Social Credit System, what was new, and perhaps quite worrying, was the fact that if you do something the authorities consider to be a dishonest behaviour — however the authorities define it — you could be sanctioned everywhere and in kind of a completely unrelated sphere of life,” she said.
“THE GOVERNMENT WANTS TO ENGINEER GOOD BEHAVIOUR IN MANY ASPECTS OF LIFE, WHETHER OR NOT IT’S ABOUT PET OWNERSHIP … OR HOW TO BEHAVE ON A TRAIN OR PLANE.”
A video taken by journalist James O’Malley on a Chinese high-speed train between Beijing and Shanghai last month showed what life might be like under what many netizens have described as a dystopian version of the future.
The clip showed an announcement warning passengers that if they travel without a ticket or behave disorderly in public areas, they will have their behaviour recorded in their “individual credit information system”.

Tuesday 13 November 2018

Nick Tsagaris – The Longreach Teen Dancing Her Way to Brisbane

From the dirt and dust to the big smoke, Longreach’s 16-year-old dancing queen Melanie Kilili will head off to Brisbane next month to partake in a Queensland Ballet residency.
Melanie is one of just 10 students from across the state to receive a spot in the High School Work Experience Residency program, and she could not be happier.
Melanie is the daughter of the owner of the Longreach School of Dance, Viv Kilili, and has been dancing since she could walk.
“I’ve been student teaching and helping mum in Longreach since I was about 11 with the kids and I always just really enjoy it,” she said.
Melanie said that aside from school, dancing is all she does.

A surprise opportunity

Finding out she had been accepted into the program was a massive surprise for Melanie — mostly due to the fact that she did not know her mum had applied for her.
“MY MUM DID IT ALL — SHE DIDN’T EVEN TELL ME SHE PUT ME IN IT,” MELANIE SAID.
Ms Kilili said they first heard about the program through one of Melanie’s teachers, but forgot to apply until the last minute, so she did it quickly.
“We just had to fill in a few things about what she has done — as far as community engagement and things like that go, then I sent it off and it was only last week that we got an email saying she had been one in ten chosen,” Ms Kilili said.
The Year 10 student dances for 15 hours every week, and on top of her studies is also completing a Certificate III in Student Teaching through the Australian Teachers of Dance (ATOD).
Melanie said she had always helped her mum with the younger dance classes and loved it and wanted to start getting qualifications.
“A few people said there’s a [certificate] available and I said ‘I’m so down, let’s do it’,” she said.
As for her residency with Queensland Ballet, Melanie said she was most excited about the opportunity to not only see The Nutcracker, but to be backstage.
“BEING OUT HERE [AT LONGREACH], IT’S SMALL AND I JUST WASN’T EXPECTING TO GET AN OPPORTUNITY LIKE THAT,” SHE SAID.
“It’s crazy.”
Currently doing tap, ballet, jazz, contemporary, and hip hop, Melanie said it was impossible to choose her favourite.
Queensland Ballet’s High School Work Experience Residency program is open to students in Years 10 to 12, and gives them an opportunity to develop an understanding of all aspects of the industry.
The program goes for five days, and Melanie will begin on December 16.

Great opportunity for regional dancers

Felicity Mandile, the director of strategy and global engagement for the Queensland Ballet, said the program is an “integral” part of the business.
“It’s a week behind the scenes, so a little bit different to normal work experience,” she said.
“They become immersed in the company … and have the opportunity to talk to marketing, finance, the artistic teams.”
Ms Mandile said this gave the young performers a look at the many career pathways available to them — not just the stage.
For rural and regional dancers like Melanie, the experience is invaluable.
“WE ARE THRILLED TO SEE AS MANY REGIONAL KIDS AS WE CAN,” MS MANDILE SAID.
“It’s really important as a metropolitan based company that we aren’t just focussing on our South East Queensland boundaries.”
Melanie said she does not mind where she ends up in the industry, as long as she is involved in dance, and said the residency will set her on her way to understanding the ins and outs of the business.
“Well I’d like to do anything with dancing — whether it’s teaching or performance,” she said.