- cross-posted to:
- humanrights@lemmy.sdf.org
- china@sopuli.xyz
- technology@lemmy.zip
- cross-posted to:
- humanrights@lemmy.sdf.org
- china@sopuli.xyz
- technology@lemmy.zip
cross-posted from: https://lemmy.sdf.org/post/46639484
Here is the report The party’s AI: How China’s new AI systems are reshaping human rights - (pdf)
The Chinese Communist Party’s AI: A new report shows how Beijing is using LLMs as ‘precision tools’ of censorship and repression at home and abroad
The rise of artificial intelligence (AI) is transforming China’s state control system into a precision instrument for managing its population and targeting groups at home and abroad, a report by the Australian Strategic Policy Institute (ASPI) finds.
China’s extensive AI‑powered visual surveillance systems are already well documented. This report reveals new ways that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is using large language models (LLMs) and other AI systems to automate censorship, enhance surveillance and pre‑emptively suppress dissent.
Key summary:
Chinese LLMs censor politically sensitive images, not just text.
- While prior research has extensively mapped textual censorship, this report identifies a critical gap: the censorship of politically sensitive images by Chinese LLMs remains largely unexamined.
- To address this, ASPI developed a testing methodology, using a dataset of 200 images likely to trigger censorship, to interrogate how LLMs censor sensitive imagery. The results revealed that visual censorship mechanisms are embedded across multiple layers within the LLM ecosystem.
The Chinese Government is deploying AI throughout the criminal‑justice pipeline—from AI‑enabled policing and mass surveillance, to smart courts, to smart prisons.
- This emerging AI pipeline reduces transparency and accountability, enhances the efficiency of police, prosecutors and prisons, and further enables state repression.
- Beijing is pushing courts to adopt AI not just in drafting basic paperwork, but even in recommending judgements and sentences, which could deepen structural discrimination and weaken defence counsels’ ability to appeal.
- The Chinese surveillance technology company iFlyTek stands out as a major provider of LLM‑based systems used in this pipeline.
China is using minority‑language LLMs to deepen surveillance and control of ethnic minorities, both in China and abroad.
- The Chinese Government is developing, and in some cases already testing, AI‑enabled public‑sentiment analysis in ethnic minority languages—especially Uyghur, Tibetan, Mongolian and Korean—for the explicitly stated purpose of enhancing the state’s capacity to monitor and control communications in those languages across text, video and audio.
- DeepSeek and most other commercial LLM models have insufficient capacity to do this effectively, as there’s little market incentive to create sophisticated, expensive models for such small language groups. The Chinese state is stepping in to provide resources and backing for the development of minority‑language models for that explicit purpose.
- China is also seeking to deploy this technology to target those groups in foreign countries along the Belt and Road.
AI now performs much of the work of online censorship in China.
- AI‑powered censorship systems scan vast volumes of digital content, flag potential violations, and delete banned material within seconds.
- Yet the system still depends on human content reviewers to supply the cultural and political judgement that algorithms lack, according to ASPI’s review of more than 100 job postings for online‑content censors in China. Future technological advances are likely to minimise that remaining dependence on human reviewers.
China’s censorship regulations have created a robust domestic market for AI‑enabled censorship tools.
- China’s biggest tech companies, including Tencent, Baidu and ByteDance, have developed advanced AI censorship platforms that they’re selling to smaller companies and organisations around China.
- In this way, China’s laws mandating internal censorship have created market incentives for China’s top tech companies to make censorship cheaper, faster, easier and more efficient—and embedding compliance into China’s digital economy.
The use of AI amplifies China’s state‑supported erosion of the economic rights of some vulnerable groups abroad, to the financial benefit of Chinese private and state‑owned companies.
- ASPI research shows that Chinese fishing fleets have begun adopting AI‑powered intelligent fishing platforms, developed by Chinese companies and research institutes, that further tip the technological scales towards Chinese vessels and away from local fishers and artisanal fishing communities.
- ASPI has identified several individual Chinese fishing vessels using those platforms that operate in exclusive economic zones where Chinese fishing is widely implicated in illegal incidents, including Mauritania and Vanuatu, and ASPI found one vessel that has itself been specifically implicated in an incident.
[…]

