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AI Government Medicine Privacy

In Data-Driven South Korea, AI is Monitoring 3,200 Senior Citizens (apnews.com) 45

The search habits of thousands of South Korean senior citizens "are being monitored through virtual-assistant smart speaker technology," writes Slashdot reader shirappu. The AP reports that around 3,200 people across the country, "mostly older than 70 and living alone, have so far allowed the SK Telecom speakers to listen to them 24 hours a day since the service launched in April 2019."

It's part of a larger look at whether technology has become too invasive, in a country where health authorities have also "aggressively used credit-card records, surveillance videos and cellphone data to find and isolate potential virus carriers." Locations where patients went before they were diagnosed are published on websites and released through cellphone alerts. Smartphone tracking apps are used to monitor around 30,000 individuals quarantined at home... [E]ntertainment venues in Seoul, Incheon and Daejeon will be required to register customers with smartphone QR codes so they can be easily located if needed. The requirement expands nationwide on June 10. But there's a dark side. People here have often managed to trace back the online information to the unnamed virus carriers, exposing embarrassing personal details and making them targets of public contempt...

President Moon Jae-in's administration has said data-driven industries will be critical in boosting a pandemic-hit economy. Officials are preparing regulations for revised data laws that lawmakers passed in January after months of wrangling. They aim to allow businesses greater freedom in collecting and analyzing anonymous personal data without seeking individual consent. If they work as intended, optimists say the laws would allow artificial intelligence to truly take off and pave the way for highly customized financial and health care services after they start in August.

But activist Oh Byoung-il said the changes could bring excessive privacy infringements unless robust safeguards are installed. "Companies will always have an endless thirst for data, but you can't give it to them all," he said.

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In Data-Driven South Korea, AI is Monitoring 3,200 Senior Citizens

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  • How does it work? (Score:2, Insightful)

    by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

    TFA is light on details, presumably it does processing in the cloud. If they could do the processing locally and just send alerts, similar to the Apple Watch fall detection, it would be fine.

    • by h33t l4x0r ( 4107715 ) on Monday June 08, 2020 @07:08AM (#60158944)
      They opt-in, so it *is* fine. You are not the arbiter of what elderly Koreans should be allowed to do.
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        AmiMoJo is a SJW. He thinks he is a arbiter of every human behavior.

        • That is not what a SJW is. A SJW is someone who is protesting police brutality right now while risking getting tear-gassed by poilce. I realize you're using the term ironically but you really should STFU with that for at least a week or two.
          • Only some of those people are SJW. Those are two other types of people on the protests: people who believe that police brutality is an issue and are legitimately trying to create change, and Antifa/Anarchists who want to cause mayhem. AmiMojo is the worst kind of SJW: he thinks he should be the judge and executioner on every bit of human behavior.

            • Yes and George Soros is over there loosening brick and paying agitators. I've heard nonsense before, it's all been debunked and removed from WH social media.
            • Only some of those people are SJW. Those are two other types of people on the protests:

              Oh, way more than two types. There are people who have been protesting for years, and there are people who just saw the recent news and have never protested anything before. There are angry young men who are mad about the system and mad about the fact that they are powerless to change anything about it; the rebels without a cause will attach to almost any cause. And, for that matter, some people who just want to burn stuff. There are white supremacists and hard-right radicals who want to smash and burn t

              • 100% correct and very accurate. In addition, the people who are currently protesting are actual protestors. The Antifa and professional looters are gone. They already accomplished their mission. The Antifa got the shit kicked out of them once the protestors actually figured it out:

                https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

                https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

                • by XXongo ( 3986865 )
                  "Antifa" doesn't really even exist in America. It's a European word that got randomly applied in America (usually to protestors who wear black, as if most of New York under age 30 doesn't), but it never really caught up here. You can't even pronounce it in American English, we pronounce the "a" in "fascist" like the a in fast (not the a in fascist.) In Europe they had bully-boys that are literally fascists (not to mention Nazi revivalists); here in America it's more the KKK and the white supremicists, not
          • Huh? I thought SJWs didn't exist. WTF now they exist? I was assured right here, on Slashdot, that SJWs were a figment of our imagination, and we were all having arguments with nonexistent people.
        • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

          And you, sir, are a fuckwit.

          Everything you accuse SJWs of - not listening, labelling people unfairly and treating them as part of a group instead of individually, arguing in bad faith, thinking they both know it all and should get to decide everything - is exactly what you do.

          You justify it by saying SJWs are bad, without realizing you have become what you hate.

          • That is because you SJWs are literally ALL ALIKE. You think you are independent thinkers, but you are not. People like you don't think at all. Just another club who wants to push "your" beliefs on the rest of us. I put "your" in quotes because it really isn't even your ideas.

            • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

              So you decided to label me, you decided that all members of this group as alike, unthinking and authoritarian... And you accuse me of being the bad guy here.

              Tell us, whose mind is closed and full of hate? And which of use merely suggested that privacy is a good thing?

          • Was it not you who was telling us, weeks ago, that SJWs were a figment of our imagination and that they don't exist? WTF they exist now? So which is it?
  • Facebook Version 2.0 (Score:5, Interesting)

    by cusco ( 717999 ) <brian@bixby.gmail@com> on Monday June 08, 2020 @07:19AM (#60158968)

    The STASI and NKVD never dreamed that people would voluntarily give up all the intimate personal details of their lives the way that they do to Farcebook/Twitter/etc., and now this is so far beyond their wildest fantasies they must be just be spinning in their graves. Someone should dig the bastards up and hook a generator to them, free electricity for life!

    • These are nursing home residents, not dissidents. Maybe take the rhetoric down a notch or two.
    • by tflf ( 4410717 )

      The STASI and NKVD never dreamed that people would voluntarily give up all the intimate personal details of their lives the way that they do to Farcebook/Twitter/etc., and now this is so far beyond their wildest fantasies they must be just be spinning in their graves. Someone should dig the bastards up and hook a generator to them, free electricity for life!

      Those charged with maintaining discipline and control of the general population have always had access to the latest and best information technology. You could make a case for the unbelievable technological improvements being a surprise, but, there would be no surprise at how most people cheaply and easily give up the intimate details of their lives. While the collection methods are more efficient than those used in the past, the general population's willingness to give up personal freedom/information/ch

    • Spinning in your grave is when something happens that you disapprove of. I think you don't understand what the term means. Please stop using it.
  • When they start these projects, they always use the same groups: elderly, little kids, prisoners, and the military. The first two have reduced rights due to age, the next had their rights taken away for evil acts, and the last voluntarily gives up their rights to serve the rest of us. That's who these pilot projects always target. And when the inevitable objections arise, we are told to take a fucking chill pill, fucking relax, these people need help, it's not like we're going to force the rest of societ

    • Fees range from $5 to $25 a day for inmates. elderly just bill medicare $100 a day

    • So many objections have been made in recent years against the "slippery slope" argument. However, those objections rarely can provide definitive proof that such an argument can't be valid. To deny that such a thing as you illustrate in your post isn't possible isn't logical.

      Human nature is such that any plan, implemented in stages over the course of generations is likely to succeed. It doesn't matter if that plan is for the good of society as a whole or good for the masters of a society. If that plan is con

  • by Atrox Canis ( 1266568 ) on Monday June 08, 2020 @08:21AM (#60159102)

    I'm paraphrasing here but it goes something like this...

    If you want to domesticate a herd of wild hogs, you begin by scattering corn on the ground. After a few weeks of this, you come in and put up one side of a square pen. Again, you let the hogs get used to the fence. It can't harm them, it's just one side. Then, a few weeks later, you put up another section. This continues until you have the entire fence created. The last step is to rush in and close the gate before the panic sets in.

You are always doing something marginal when the boss drops by your desk.

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