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Russia is growing its surveillance state but not everyone is monitored equally
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Rusia sigue el camino de China y profundiza el uso de la tecnología de reconocimiento facial para rastrear a los opositores
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Russia’s surveillance state still doesn’t match China. But Putin is racing to catch up. Robyn Dixon © Natalia Kolesnikova/AFP/Getty Images A woman walks past a surveillance camera and a mosaic depicting the Soviet founder Vladimir Lenin at a Metro station in Moscow on March 10. MOSCOW Russian authorities are ramping up the use of facial recognition technology to track opposition protesters to their homes and arrest them a powerful new Kremlin tool to crush opposition. But when state security agents are suspected of murders or attacks on journalists and opposition activists, surveillance cameras have at times been switched off or “malfunction.”
By ROBYN DIXON | The Washington Post | Published: April 17, 2021 MOSCOW Russian authorities are ramping up the use of facial recognition technology to track opposition protesters to their homes and arrest them – a powerful new Kremlin tool to crush opposition. But when state security agents are suspected of murders or attacks on journalists and opposition activists, surveillance cameras have at times been switched off or malfunction. And the system is so leaky that surveillance data on individuals can be bought for a small sum on Russia s notorious black market in data, along with all kinds of other personal information. There is even a name for the clandestine cyber-bazaar: probiv.
People protesting against a court decision ordering Navalny jailed for nearly three years, in downtown Moscow on Feb 2, 2021. A lawyer with Moscow-based human rights group Agora said that several of his clients were brought in for questioning on Jan 31 after being picked out by cameras in Moscow. AFP
TBILISI: Russian authorities are deploying facial recognition cameras to identify protesters during rallies in support of Kremlin critic Alexei Navalny in Moscow, human rights groups said, warning that the technology is being used to stifle peaceful dissent.
With more than 105,000 cameras, Moscow boasts one of the world s most comprehensive surveillance systems – which authorities say has helped cut crime and enforce coronavirus lockdown restrictions.
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