Tuesday, October 20, 2020

Will China Decide The Next US President? Documentary: American Republic ...

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Russia, China and Iran which one is the most assertive and aggressive in this area?
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I believe it is China.
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China more than Russia right now?
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Yes.
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President Trump signing two executive orders last night banning US transactions with Chinese
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tech firm Tencent and ByteDance.
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My name is Simone Gao, and I am a journalist working in Washington, DC. The CCP leader
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Xi Jinping believe that big data is China s most important national resource. What could
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they do with that advantage?
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Every mobile app has a widely open back door that can do whatever they want to.
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It is no secret that China prefers a Trump loss and a Biden win, but in this program,
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I will uncover, in the age of AI, if there is something the Chinese Communist Party wants
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far more than a Biden presidency.
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This is TikTok.
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It puts the world in motion and sets it to music. You create, you laugh and you share.
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For much of the younger generation, this IS the world.
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Owned by the Chinese technology company ByteDance, TikTok is one of the world s most popular
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social media apps. It has been downloaded more than 2 billion times globally and maintains
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a total of 100 million active users in the United States.
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Given that the app has been around for just over 2 years, how has it become so popular
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so quickly?
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As I learned from AI experts, TikTok is designed to be addictive.
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The first time you open it, it doesn t know what you like. It ll recommend some default
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pages. Those pages are decided by your locale.
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His name is Jack, and he is a former employee of Huawei, China s largest telecommunications
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company. For security reasons, we ve blurred his face. Jack is a Big Data and AI expert.
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When you register, it may also ask you to make some simple selections. It can guess
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what your age is, your gender, and also the version of your phone s operating system,
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so it can vaguely confirm your identity. According to these conditions, it may give you recommendations
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for what videos you may like.
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He told me that TikTok s system adds multiple tags to every video clicked on by a user.
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The more videos you click, the more TikTok knows about you. Through this data collection
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and their powerful algorithm, they can deliver the exact videos you like. Before you realize
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the tactics, you are addicted to what they deliver.
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The story of TikTok is the story of data, big Data. TikTok collects massive amounts
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of data from its users. According to researchers, and as reported by Bloomberg,
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TikTok starts collecting data the minute you download the app. It tracks the websites you
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re browsing and how you type, down to keystroke rhythms and patterns. The app warns users
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it has full access to photos, videos and contact information of friends stored in the device
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s address book, unless you revoke those permissions. The app also tracks everywhere you go using
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your IP address and GPS coordinates, providing the app with your precise location while working,
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voting, attending protests, traveling, or simply picking up milk from the grocery store.
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Are we okay with this? Through my conversations with data security experts and everyday users
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of social media apps, I came to realize that most adults know that information will be
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collected about them and will be used by marketing companies to target advertising effectively.
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This is true of most social media platforms in America. But for Communist China, data
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is handled in a very different way.
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Can you compare Google, Facebook and Amazon s methods of collecting data with that of
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TikTok?
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Google is, as I mentioned, compared to all the others, it actually collects the information
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more aggressively for the commercial purpose. But, remember its commercial purposes, it
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does not use that to hack you or do something like that, right? But TikTok is a different
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story. TikTok is kind of a dangerous animal, because TikTok collects the data, uses the
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data to improve their algorithm.
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This is James Qiu, a former Apple executive. He explains how China collects data differently
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from the Americans.
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China, you know that there is no privacy. I mean, who cares? Right? So, the company
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actually collects every single thing of persons. And, because of that, because they have the
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capability of collecting all the information from a person and they can actually train
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their deep learning model to be perfect.
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In this case, U.S. companies and Western companies cannot compete with them. The privacy law
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said if one company has 10 different apps, the information collected by each app can
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only be used by each app. You cannot combine them and interrelate them and then synthesize
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new data out of them. Okay. So, that is significantly restricted. But for a Chinese company, there
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is no such a rule. That's why they can build a better recommendation algorithm, this is
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a very dangerous company. When it collects your data, they know who you are, they know
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what you like and dislike. They can actually manipulate you.
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Narration: In other words, while TikTok does aggressively collect its own data, its powerful
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algorithm may not be built solely on data collected within the app. TikTok s Chinese
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parent company, ByteDance, has been proven to be a data vacuum entity, amassing a large
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amount of user data, not only from its three popular apps but also from its many tech partners.
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Narration: According to James, the intention of the TikTok s algorithm is to encourage
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a compulsive use of their app. Once it becomes a compulsion, users are more likely to be
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manipulated. Messaging hidden in seemingly harmless videos goes well beyond making money.
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TikTok represents a model the CCP is using to influence the world. Retired U.S. Air Force
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Brigadier General Robert Spalding explained to me the CCP s grand vision for Big Data
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and AI:
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So Kaifu Lee says that China seeks to become the Saudi Arabia of data. So, think about
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the entire world's data and collection of that data as being tantamount to having power
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over the world. This is the way that the Chinese communist party sees the global internet.
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Globalization is connected to this... That's why Xi Jinping goes to Davos and says, We
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must work together. We must continue globalization. We must continue this global connectivity
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Because it enables him to take the data into China behind the great firewall and create
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this huge data ocean that then their artificial intelligence can learn from.
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So, this is their goal, because they know that they can use that, just like TikTok is
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used as a platform to influence. They can use that to influence not only their own people,
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to basically not know the true history of China, but also to influence the rest of the
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world. This is the power that, quite frankly, we built. Silicon Valley built this power.
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We built it and made hundreds, trillions of dollars. The Chinese Communist Party saw that
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and said, not only do we want to have control over that economic engine, we want to have
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the ability to influence socially and politically as well. This is really the convergence of
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technology and warfare for the 21st century.
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The Chinese Communist Party has been seeking an ideal time to test its AI advantage. An
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ideal time to see if their AI can be used to manipulate a world power, specifically
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the U.S. That time is now. Leaders on both sides of the political aisle agree that the
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2020 election is one of the most important since the nation s founding. It is critical
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that the U.S. heed its intelligence community s warning that China is now actively seeking
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to influence the outcome of the election.
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National Security Adviser Robert O Brien told CBS s Face the Nation on August 9th that China
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and Russia are targeting the nation s election infrastructure with cyberattacks.
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I want to ask you this specifically because the intelligence community issued this very
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sharp warning on Friday detailing efforts to interfere. Looking at the statement from
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July 24th though, the language there says the adversaries were trying to access candidates
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private communications and election infrastructure. And that s at both the state and federal networks.
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That sounds awful a lot like what Russia did back in 2016. Now it is happening under your
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watch. What are you doing to stop it?
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What we are doing is getting our cyber team in place. DHS is working very hard to try
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to track down those malign actors.
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Is it Russia again?
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Look, we know it s China, we know it's Russia.
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Tempering in the election infrastructure?
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Absolutely, trying to access secretary of state websites that sort of thing and collect
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data on Americans and engage in influence operations, whether it is on TikTok, Twitter
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or other spaces.It is a real concern Marcia. It is not just Russia, the Chinese don t want
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the president to win.
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So, a lot of conversation about you and your latest move. Let s talk about that.
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In an August 17th statement to Fox News, Director of National Intelligence, John Ratcliffe,
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revealed that China poses a greater national security threat to the U.S. than any other
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nation economically, militarily and technologically. That includes threats of election influence
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and interference.
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Two weeks later, on September 2nd, Attorney General William Barr nailed down the Chinese
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interference once more:
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Of those 3 countries the intelligence community has pointed to Russia, China and Iran which
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one is the most assertive and aggressive in this area?
11:07
I believe it is China.
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Which one?
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China.
11:11
China more than Russia right now?
11:12
Yes.
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Why do you say that?
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Because I have seen the intelligence, and that s what I concluded.
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What are they trying to do?
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I am not going to get into the intelligence.
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Who do they want to help with?
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I am not going to get into that.
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David Kamioner. a former member of the U.S. Army Intelligence, told me more of the Intelligence
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community s insights:
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What the CCP wants is turmoil in America, because that could create paralysis for America
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on the world stage. It's almost a political extortion. If you don't elect Biden, the riots
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will continue. If you don't like Biden, the Chinese, or perhaps the Iranians could move
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somewhere and give us a national security crisis. So, the CCP clearly wants Joe Biden
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to win. And they are doing everything they can with data with AI and other areas to make
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sure he does.
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If they have to pick between Biden victory, and maybe it creates this chaotic America,
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which one do you think they will pick?
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They can have both because if Biden wins, the right will not stand out. Hopefully there
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won't be violence as the left, is perpetrating on the streets of America today. But the right
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will become even more aggressive, which means there'll be more turmoil. There'll be more
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violence on the streets from America. There'll be more riots. Hopefully again, not from the
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right. In fact, Kamala Harris said recently that if she is elected, even if she and Joe
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Biden are elected, the riots should not stop, nor should they stop. So, you can have both
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Biden, you can have paralysis, you can have turmoil.
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David told me the fact that the Chinese players are trying to hack into the Secretary of State
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websites is particularly concerning because those offices are responsible for administering
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elections at the local level.
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They're trying to get access literally to election results. Now these are...in every
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American state there is a Secretary of State's office at the state level, that coordinates
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elections. That goes down to county election offices and bureaus. What they can do, not
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only in state elections, but even in local elections, if they can hack in, they can change
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results for close elections. They can gain biographical material on voters. They could
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get voter turnout records. They could strike at the very basis of the American democratic
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process. It's a very, very dangerous game they're playing. Now, do our people like the
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FBI and, say, other people know they're doing this? Yes, they do. But, it's a race to see
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who is more technologically adept and who is paying attention. We better hope we win
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this one.
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From U.S. intelligence about Russian efforts to cast doubts on mail-in ballots.
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In watching the news coverage of election interference, I came to realize that when
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the American mainstream media talks about foreign meddling in U.S. elections, Russia
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is still the focus. They are attentive to harms done four years ago. Yet, there is a
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greater threat on the horizon. A threat backed with the technology and data necessary to
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do far more damage. If U.S. citizens are truly concerned about a foreign power s ability
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to influence a critical election, they should consider this example.
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Thanks for everyone s help, support and care.
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His name is Han Kuo-yu, Taiwan s Nationalist Party of China s presidential candidate for
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2020. While initially popular as a candidate, he ultimately lost to the incumbent, President
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Tsai Yingwen, largely due to Taiwan s overwhelming rejection of the Mainland Chinese government
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that was backing Han.
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While Han s loss was due to the Chinese Communist Party, his initial rise was their doing as
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well.
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The key milestone of Han s political career was his victory in the Kaohsiung mayoral race.
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Han was largely unknown through the first four months of the election season. A day
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after formally announcing his campaign, however, a Facebook fan group was formed. The page
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promoted Han through talking points and memes, consistent sharing of fake news about his
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opponent and public shaming of his critics. By election day, Han had more than 66,000
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members on the fan page and received a surge of fan posts just hours before being elected
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in a landslide victory.
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Dr. Puma Shen, Assistant Professor at National Taipei University, did a study on Han s sudden
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rise to popularity.
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First, China created many websites that published and shared a large number of articles on Han-Kuoyu
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and fake news on Han s opponent party: The Democratic Progressive Party. They then generated
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a massive amount of search requests on Han Kuo-yu. They literally overwhelm the system
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with their requests. By doing so, google s algorithm worked to push Han related news
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that the CCP generated to the first two pages.
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According to Dr. Shen s research, a significant percentage of the fans on Han s Facebook group
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were not from Taiwan. They were from Mainland China. To further demonstrate China s involvement,
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Dr. Shen s group tested Han s name on the internet for the final two months of the campaign.
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They found that Taiwan was just 16th on the list of countries searching for information
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on Han.
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Jack told me the CCP is obviously behind the efforts and this is how they did it.
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A large number of search results can come from people s natural behavior, and it can
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also come from bots automatically publishing articles. They can come from IP addresses
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inside China, from IP address in Taiwan, or IP addresses from any other country. In this
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way, Taiwan may have less searches than other countries.
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According to the Financial Times, key governmental departments in Taiwan receive tens of millions
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of hacking attempts each month. Then between 2015 and 2017, that number tripled. These
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attacks, intended to steal sensitive governmental data and personal information, were primarily
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perpetrated by China.
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Does the CCP have enough resources to do things in America that s similar to what they do
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in Taiwan?
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That s the scary part. They have been building in the last few decades control over our corporate
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institutions, our wall street, our investment banks, our political systems, academia, our
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think tank, our law firms, our PR firms, our consulting firms. You know, what we forget
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is the Chinese Communist Party doesn t need to use PLA to do all of these, they can pay
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Washington PR firms, they can pay Washington consultants, they can pay Washington law firms,
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and they do.
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The Taiwan story took a drastic turn though. Prior to the presidential election, massive
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demonstrations broke out in Hong Kong against a Chinese extradition law. Those protests,
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and the CCP s brutal response to them, led the Taiwanese people to reject a future under
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the rule of the CCP and a president indebted to them. They chose the incumbent President
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Tsai-Yingwen who, though not popular at the time, is consistently tough on the CCP.
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It is safe to say, if it is not because of Hong Kong, Beijing would have secured a Taiwanese
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president of their choosing.
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The game to influence a major political election is complicated and can be costly. Sometimes,
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it takes on the least expected form.
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This is Christine, an emigrant from China, and a successful real estate agent in the
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affluent Orange County area of California. Like many among the extensive Chinese diaspora
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in the U.S., Christine continues to habitually use Chinese apps.
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I use a lot of Chinese apps, such as WeChat, Chinese Tiktok Douyin and etc. Because it
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is very convenient for me to use these apps to communicate with my friends and family
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in China.
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WeChat is the world s largest standalone multi-purpose mobile app with a billion active users worldwide,
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mostly Chinese.
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Douyin s popularity stems from its short, entertaining videos, much like sister company
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TikTok. Both are owned by ByteDance but operate independently of each other, with Douyin created
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for users in China and TikTok designed for international use. Christine says that news
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about America has been circulating rapidly on these Chinese apps, and they all strike
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one tone.
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Since the Pandemic began, I found there have been a lot of negative reports about America
20:23
in these apps. Many of them are false, strange reports. They don t reflect what I know about
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the situation here.
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I support Trump. But what I saw on WeChat and Douyin is all negative information about
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Trump. It seems there is more pro-Biden information out there.
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America is the biggest threat to global stability and security.
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Although Douyin uses powerful algorithms to determine your interests and target the recommended
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content accordingly, algorithms are not the only factor in what Douyin shows to each user.
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In China, the most posts DouYin users see are from the Party s mouthpiece - People s
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daily, simply because DouYin is required by the government to push People s Daily s content
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to its 500 million active users. As a result of such a powerful promotion, the People s
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Daily has almost 100 million followers on Douyin today.
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This is a recognizable and recurring strategy within China.
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TikTok functions in a similar way to Douyin, only, instead of recommending the CCP s official
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propaganda, TikTok pushes political content that comes from other app users.
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Ethan, a TikTok user from the U.S., told me how it works.
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Once I started using TikTok, it pushed a lot of anti-Trump or pro-Biden videos to me. But
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I did not even say or select that I am interested in politics. But after a while, like I used
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the app for a while, the anti-Trump video became a little bit fewer. I started to see
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some pro-Trump videos as well. That might be because I did not like or follow any of
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those anti-Trump videos. But the anti-Trump videos were still like 80 or 60%, around that
22:30
in the political videos. Recently it changed. It might be because that, I don t even watch
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those anti-Trump videos. So, right now it is only maybe a quarter or less than that.
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But there are still Anti-Trump videos pushed to me.
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Tiktok has a sophisticated AI model making recommendations to its users. When a user
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begins to use TikTok without being classified by the system as pro-Biden or pro-Trump. TikTok
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displays neutral content to the users. I quote neutral since it is based on TikTok s standard.
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In reality, there are many more pro-Biden content being displayed to the users anyhow.
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Based on the data collected on the users browsing searching habit, TikTok can classify the users
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as a conservative user quickly. Then it starts to display a few pro-Trump content to the
23:33
user while mixing it with various pro-Biden content. When TikTiok figures out the user
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is not very interested in politics, it starts to display fewer political content.
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So the goal of TikTok is to, you know, Number one, do not get this user so upset to the
23:55
degree that he just won t use TikTok anymore. But at the same time TikTok still pushes pro-Biden
24:03
content to him in a degree that he can tolerate.
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James: That is absolutely right.
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Three months (weeks) prior to the presidential election, a coalition of TikTok creators launched
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a national TokTheVote campaign. By their own definition, the campaign is meant to empower
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Gen Z to vote and to mobilize young leaders in the fight for progress. In just four weeks,
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the hashtag #tokthevote had gained more than 18.2 million views.
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The videos posted to that hashtag are often tied to issues of social justice and equality.
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The majority of videos either express support for Biden and Harris or directly attack Trump.
24:52
Those offering support for the current administration are virtually nonexistent.
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TikTok, to American popular culture, specifically to possible young voters, America, is a Trojan
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horse. The CCP understands that politics, and everything they're sanctioning, is affected
25:09
by popular culture, and TikTok is a way for them to get into this.
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The "TokTheVote" campaign had not yet launched when I met with David, yet he predicted this
25:19
very strategy leading into the election.
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I wouldn't be surprised if close to election day, so it's a lot of young people use TikTok,
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we'll see a massive "get out the vote" drive for Biden on TikTok, trying to get those young
25:32
people, might not even necessarily be specifically for Biden. It could be "get out the vote"
25:36
because they know young people tend to vote Democratic, tend to vote more liberal, and
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this election cycle might tend to move for Biden. So, it is a way for them to have pop
25:45
culture goals, to have those goals come into the election process and to influence through
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even small things, through movies, through entertainment, again, as we said, a lot of
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CCP money to Hollywood. Through all those aspects, the American elections, because for
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a very long time, popular culture has meant as much to American politics as any policy
26:05
has.
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Narration: This is a proven strategy, one that has been demonstrated in movements organized
26:10
by Americans. Here is an example. On June 20, 2020, Trump held his first rally in 4
26:18
months. According to the Associated Press and the Inside Edition, 800,000 people had
26:23
registered for tickets online, but only 6200 people showed up, leaving the stadium less
26:30
than half full. TikTok users and K-Pop Stans claimed credit for the low turnout.
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It is an unmitigated fact that K-Pop Stans hold so much power on the internet. I am convinced
26:45
that you guys could orchestrate a murder over twitter. That s just the power you hold. If
26:51
you guys haven t heard, Trump is planning a rally in Tulsa, Ok, on Juneteenth which
26:57
is a slap in the face to black people. Because man, it is just...because tickets are available
27:04
by two, for FREE, on his website, if you just put in your phone number. I am saying bts
27:11
stans should DO this but what I am absolutely saying is that they should absolutely go and
27:14
spam that website and take up all the tickets so they don t have any people at the rally.
27:18
Narration: K-Pop Stans originally connected as a way to share their love of K-Pop, but
27:22
their mission later broadened to include direct political activism. That activism is often
27:29
conducted on TikTok, a place where pop culture and politics best converge. This video alone
27:35
received over 2 million views.
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So I recommended that all of us who want to see this 19,000 seats in the auditorium barely
27:42
filled or completely empty go reserve the tickets now and leave them standing alone
27:46
on the stage, what do you say?
27:50
Millennials and Gen Zers who are now old enough to vote wield significant political power
27:55
in the 2020 elections. Part of their power comes from their overall unity on social and
27:57
political issues, often leaning toward a liberal viewpoint. And while the younger generations
27:58
have historically been less politically active, with fewer than half voting in the 2016 election,
28:04
this year looks to be different. That difference may stem from their ability to form coalitions,
28:05
as TikTok enables them to do, and to see the results of their collective action, as was
28:06
true in the Trump rally takedown.
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What impact might they have on the election? A substantial one. There are 86 million Millennials
28:13
and Gen Zers who are eligible to vote, representing 37% of all 235 million voters. How many of
28:22
them use TikTok? We don t really know, but we do know that 63% of the 100 million active
28:29
users in the U.S. are under the age of 30.
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The youth have, to date, not had the political impact they were capable of. TikTok just might
28:38
change that in 2020.
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Do you think TikTok can influence people s political opinions?
28:51
TikTok has the potential of influence people with the manipulated information. They are
28:56
good at it. It inherits the AI model of Toutiao which is Bytedance s popular news platform.
29:04
Toutiao helps the Chinese government monitor and manipulate mass opinions.
29:08
So in that sense, do you think TikTok has the potential to influence the American people
29:16
s political stance during the election.
29:18
What TikTok needs to do is to fine tune the AI model using the data they collected from
29:23
the western country. It is a piece of cake for TikTok.
29:30
This is what I have learned so far: The danger the CCP poses to the U.S. through TikTok is
29:36
two-fold. First, it uses pop culture as a trojan horse in order to influence the younger
29:41
generation. Second, it uses collected American data to perfect its AI model for further manipulation
29:48
in this country.
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On September 28th, Judge Carl Nichols of the U.S. District Court in Washington, D.C revoked
29:58
the Trump Administration s ban on TikTok, leaving it available for download in U.S.
30:03
app stores through November 12th.
30:06
The Trump administration originally demanded that TikTok be sold to an American company
30:11
or face a complete ban within the U.S.. A proposal emerged between TikTok, Oracle and
30:19
Walmart, but despite an early signal of support from Trump, questions over exact ownership
30:25
percentages and the data hosting arrangement suspended the deal.
30:28
I talked to a Huawei expert about this prospect of, uh, Oracle, uh, owning part of the company
30:29
overseas. you know, oversees, the security operation oversees their coding and everything.
30:30
And he said, as long as bite dance is still a main stakeholder there, uh, technician Chinese
30:31
technicians are still writing the code. There are managers overseeing the daily operation
30:32
and they are participating in the decision making, risks cannot be eliminated at all.
30:33
I mean, the Chinese, no matter how good the deal looks like on the surface, do you agree?
30:34
By allowing the Chinese communist party to have any interest whatsoever, whether it's
30:35
in understanding the technology, or it is in allowing people to actually physically
30:39
touch the code or the hardware where the code runs, it's all vulnerable.
30:47
TikTok s use of a powerful Chinese algorithm, and the resulting collection of user data,
30:52
has revealed another possibility: the likelihood that apps from China may be operating with
30:58
secret access keys, master passwords, and secret commands, called backdoors. In spite
31:04
of that risk, James told me that thousands of Chinese apps are accepted in the Apple
31:09
and Google app stores every year without a proper vetting process.
31:13
So, how does Apple vet Chinese apps that are trying to enter its app store?
31:18
A lot of Chinese apps actually sneaked into the U.S. app store as if it is native. Right?
31:26
So that is the first problem. The second problem is when Apple app store checks the apps, it
31:33
checks very basic stuff. So, basically, Apple published a set of rules, and every mobile
31:40
app needs to follow those rules. Apple only checks off those kinds of things, but as for
31:46
whether the app is kind of tracking the customer behavior and you know send the private data
31:55
into a third party server, or use that for commercial purposes or other purposes, Apple
32:02
has no way to check it. So, in that sense, every mobile app has a widely open back door
32:11
that can do whatever they want to.
32:13
Silicon Valley may be the country s best line of defense against malicious apps from China.
32:18
But they seem uninterested in that responsibility.
32:22
How much control or how much reign does the national security establishment have on the
32:29
Silicon Valley?
32:30
None, zero. In fact, a Silicon Valley despises the national security establishment. Now there's
32:37
a few people that have worked within, um, government, but what happens is many of them
32:42
are entrepreneurs or people that think outside of the box. And of course, what you find when
32:47
you come to Washington, D C is it abhores, you know, people that think outside of the
32:51
box, they want conformity and they want you to be, be bureaucratic. So, they don't tend
32:55
to last very long and they don't tend to make much headway because in order to actually
33:00
innovate in government, you have to have patience. You have to be wily and you have to kind of
33:05
figure out where is the way that you can actually make, um, you know, progress happen. There's
33:11
not a lot of people that are willing to do that because they get frustrated by the bureaucracy.
33:18
In 2017, General Secretary of the Chinese Communist Party, Xi Jinping, announced a bold
33:25
plan for Beijing. He predicted that China would catch up with the United States in AI
33:32
by 2025 and lead the world by 2030. China may have reached that goal earlier than they
33:39
had planned. Although America still leads in cutting-edge AI technology, China has surpassed
33:45
America in AI application. They accomplished this by collecting far more data. More data
33:52
means better AI.
33:54
I believe that, in the eyes of Xi Jinping and his colleagues, Big Data and AI are more
33:59
than just another curious technology. Xi openly stated that Big Data is the most critical
34:06
national resource for China. Why would he believe so? Likely because the CCP knows exactly
34:13
what Big Data and AI are capable of, how they can be used to control over their own people
34:19
and manipulate other countries. Best of all, the Party is confident that their political
34:25
system guarantees China a reliable advantage in data collecting and AI application over
34:31
the free world.
34:33
I mean what do you think is the biggest strength America still has today over China?
34:41
The constitution. I think the constitution, as an idea, as a foundation for how to build
34:49
a society, a blueprint, if you will, for how to build a human society, where you have human
34:55
frailty and you have to deal with it, and you have to ensure that the way you deal with
35:00
that is to ensure that no human or humans can have ultimate power. I think that is the
35:05
strength of America. Our total existence as a free society, where people are allowed to
35:13
live as they want and reach their, to present potential is at risk from the tools that we
35:19
ourselves built. And the Chinese communist party have appropriate and begun to, you know,
35:25
use extensively to undermine our society.
35:31
It has been 244 years since this nation was founded. At that time, a claim was made.
35:40
We hold these truths to be self-evident, that all men are created equal, that they are endowed
35:46
by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty
35:53
and the pursuit of happiness.
35:54
I believe if these claims are true, they must be true then, true during the civil war and
36:02
true today.
36:03
If you go back to the founding of this country, it wasn't everybody that decided, Hey, we
36:09
wanted a free country. It was a few, it was a determined few that were not going to be
36:14
subjugated, that they were going to stand up for their rights. And they were going to
36:18
find other people that were like-minded and they were going to work together to build
36:22
this new land. And those people exist today. We just have not been fighting to get, so
36:31
yes, absolutely. We can win. We just have to stand up and fight.
36:47
Fighting together. Democrats and Republicans.
37:19
Absolutely.

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