Paris Times

Liberté, Égalité, Fraternité
Monday, Nov 17, 2025

Edward Snowden’s Warning on Surveillance Infrastructure Gains New Resonance

Whistle-blower flags risk of AI-driven state scoring systems—analysts now see echoes in China and beyond.
Former intelligence contractor Edward Snowden has long cautioned that extensive data collection—every photo, purchase, message and movement—could be fed into algorithmic systems that determine one’s future.

Recent reporting confirms that this scenario is no longer hypothetical: in the People’s Republic of China, city-wide “brain” systems already link CCTV, facial recognition, travel records and other data to enforcement mechanisms.

Experts note that some Western governments and technology-companies are now deploying components of the same architecture, raising questions about what is being imported and how it may evolve.

In China’s major urban centres, local governments have created integrated systems that monitor citizens’ daily movements, behaviour and compliance with regulatory rules.

These systems assign individuals to risk-categories; falling short triggers consequences, such as restricted travel or exclusion from services.

One report states that this model is “now being watched closely by regulators, governments and private firms in Europe and North America”.

Meanwhile Snowden’s warnings have become increasingly pointed.

He said: “Institutions are burning the public’s faith in them at the precise moment in history when we have developed the capacity to replace them with algorithms”.

The concern now is less about whether the technology could exist, and more about how much it can be exported or adapted by free-society governments without eroding civil liberties.

One Western regulator recently flagged a pilot programme that uses biometric identity checks, travel data and social-media content to assign “trust-scores” for accessing government services.

While the authorities framed this as fraud-prevention and identity protection, critics warn the logic echoes China’s “score and sanction” model.

Civil-liberties groups argue that the replication of such architecture in democracies demands full public debate and transparency.

The broader context is that surveillance has not ceased to expand since Snowden’s 2013 revelations.

An advocacy organisation noted that intelligence collection under foreign-intelligence laws was renewed and in some respects expanded this year.

That suggests governmental appetite for data-driven control remains strong on both sides of the political spectrum.

For democratic societies, the challenge is stark: how to harness emerging technologies—AI, biometrics, integrated records—while preserving individual autonomy, accountability and human judgment.

Snowden’s warning is now unfolding not as a distant possibility, but as a test-case.

The question for policymakers is whether they will replicate the architecture of control—or consciously steer toward architecture of empowerment.

The next move may decide whose future these systems will serve.
Newsletter

Related Articles

0:00
0:00
Close
AI Researchers Claim Human-Level General Intelligence Is Already Here
Tragedy in Serbia: Coach Mladen Žižović Collapses During Match and Dies at 44
Trump–Putin Budapest Summit Cancelled After Moscow Memo Raises Conditions for Ukraine Talks
Russia’s President Putin Declares Burevestnik Nuclear Cruise Missile Ready for Deployment
Francis Ford Coppola Auctions Luxury Watches After Self-Financed Film Flop
Convicted Sex Offender Mistakenly Freed by UK Prison Service Arrested in London
Swift Heist at the Louvre Sees Eight French Crown Jewels Stolen in Under Seven Minutes
‘Frightening’ First Night in Prison for Sarkozy: Inmates Riot and Shout ‘Little Nicolas’
White House Announces No Imminent Summit Between Trump and Putin
China Presses Netherlands to “properly” Resolve the Nexperia Seizure as Supply Chain Risks Grow
US and Qatar Warn EU of Trade and Energy Risks from Tough Climate Regulation
Merz Attacks Migrants, Sparks Uproar, and Refuses to Apologize: “Ask Your Daughters”
Apple Challenges EU Digital Markets Act Crackdown in Landmark Court Battle
Nicolas Sarkozy begins five-year prison term at La Santé in Paris
This Is How the 'Heist of the Century' Was Carried Out at the Louvre in Seven Minutes: France Humiliated as Crown with 2,000 Diamonds Vanishes
France’s Wealthy Shift Billions to Luxembourg and Switzerland Amid Tax and Political Turmoil
S&P Downgrades France’s Credit Rating, Citing Soaring Debt and Political Instability
"The Tsunami Is Coming, and It’s Massive": The World’s Richest Man Unveils a New AI Vision
Dramatic Development in the Death of 'Mango' Founder: Billionaire's Son Suspected of Murder
Two Years of Darkness: The Harrowing Testimonies of Israeli Hostages Emerging From Gaza Captivity
EU Moves to Use Frozen Russian Assets to Buy U.S. Weapons for Ukraine
Europe Emerges as the Biggest Casualty in U.S.-China Rare Earth Rivalry
French Business Leaders Decry Budget as Macron’s Pro-Enterprise Promise Undermined
“Firepower” Promised for Ukraine as NATO Ministers Meet — But U.S. Tomahawks Remain Undecided
Brands Confront New Dilemma as Extremists Adopt Fashion Labels
The Sydney Sweeney and Jeans Storm: “The Outcome Surpassed Our Wildest Dreams”
French PM Suspends Macron’s Pension Reform Until After 2027 in Bid to Stabilize Government
Orange, Bouygues and Free Make €17 Billion Bid for Drahi’s Altice France Telecom Assets
AI and Cybersecurity at Forefront as GITEX Global 2025 Kicks Off in Dubai
Ex-Microsoft Engineer Confirms Famous Windows XP Key Was Leaked Corporate License, Not a Hack
China’s lesson for the US: it takes more than chips to win the AI race
French Political Turmoil Elevates Marine Le Pen as Rassemblement National Poised for Power
The Davos Set in Decline: Why the World Economic Forum’s Power Must Be Challenged
France: Less Than a Month After His Appointment, the New French Prime Minister Resigns
Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orbán stated that Hungary will not adopt the euro because the European Union is falling apart.
Mayor in western Germany in intensive care after stabbing
Australian government pays Deloitte nearly half a million dollars for a report built on fabricated quotes, fake citations, and AI-generated nonsense.
Macron Faces Intensifying Pressure to Resign or Trigger New Elections Amid France’s Political Turmoil
UK Police Crack Major Gang in Smuggling of up to 40,000 Stolen Phones to China
BYD’s UK Sales Soar Nearly Nine-Fold, Making Britain Its Biggest Market Outside China
Latvia to Bar Tourist and Occasional Buses to Russia and Belarus Until 2026
Wave of Complaints Against Apple Over iPhone 17 Pro’s Scratch Sensitivity
France Names New Government Amid Political Crisis
Pro Europe and Anti-War Babiš Poised to Return to Power After Czech Parliamentary Vote
Sean ‘Diddy’ Combs Sentenced to Fifty Months in Prison Following Prostitution Conviction
Taylor Swift’s ‘Showgirl’ Launch Extends Billion-Dollar Empire
Trump Announces Intention to Impose 100 Percent Tariff on Foreign-Made Films
Altman Says GPT-5 Already Outpaces Him, Warns AI Could Automate 40% of Work
Russian Research Vessel 'Yantar' Tracked Mapping Europe’s Subsea Cables, Raising Security Alarms
Global Cruise Industry Posts Dramatic Comeback with 34.6 Million Passengers in 2024
×