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Chinese court’s WeChat adverts offer cash to snitch on your indebted friends and relatives

South China Morning Post

發布於 2019年09月23日10:09 • Phoebe Zhang phoebe.zhang@scmp.com
  • Rewards via mini-program on the app are announced by court in Hangzhou
  • Chance to ‘participate in whistle-blowing’ in line with China’s social credit system
Jianggan district court in Hangzhou has found a new way to pressure local debtors into paying up by sending advertisements to their friends and families on WeChat and offering rewards for providing tip-offs about new debts. Photo: Weibo
Jianggan district court in Hangzhou has found a new way to pressure local debtors into paying up by sending advertisements to their friends and families on WeChat and offering rewards for providing tip-offs about new debts. Photo: Weibo

A court in eastern China has found a new way to target local debtors: sending advertisements to their friends and family on WeChat, offering them money for telling the court about new debts and for pressuring the person to pay up.

The move by Jianggan district court in the city of Hangzhou, Zhejiang province, is the latest tactic aimed at laolai " a derogatory term for people who fail to repay debts " as China develops its social credit scheme.

The adverts are generated through a WeChat mini-program " an application smaller than 10 megabytes that can run instantly on the app's interface " the court said in an article on its website last Monday.

It said "custom-making advertisements can expose (debtors) efficiently and spread through social networks, so that the debtor can voluntarily take responsibility, and this can provide a good environment for gaining effective tips about the debts".

One of the adverts, sent to a debtor's friends and relatives via WeChat. Photo: Weibo
One of the adverts, sent to a debtor's friends and relatives via WeChat. Photo: Weibo

The article featured example advertisements with sample names and faces, bearing the heading "Wanted Notice" and stating underneath: "mobilising social forces, participating in whistle-blowing".

One of the highest rewards in the real adverts " 8.8 million yuan (US$1.2 million) " is offered on a woman named Zhu Lifeng, who is described as owing 177 million yuan, news portal Sina.com reported.

The advert says Zhu and her late husband Zhou Fengjian provided guarantees for companies when they took loans from banks, and when the firms went bankrupt they were responsible for repayment.

China is offering it citizens up to US$86,000 to snitch on porn

The WeChat mini-program has sparked discussion of privacy invasion online.

"Who has the right to use social networks like this?" one person asked on Weibo.

"It's a little frightening to think about, really " they are sending this advertisement specifically to people familiar to the debtors," another said.

However, many also hailed the court's decision, saying that if debtors had refused for years to pay back money owed, they did not care about their reputation and should not complain about invasion of privacy.

In 2017, China launched a national name-and-shame system under which the name, photograph, ID number, home address and amount owed of someone accused of being in debt would be displayed in media including newspapers, internet, radio and television, as well as on screens in buses and public lifts. Those who failed to repay a bank loan were blacklisted.

In January, a WeChat "laolai map" was developed in north China's Hebei province. With a swipe of their fingers, people can scan a radius of 500 metres (550 yards) from their location for any laolai, including individuals, company employees and other organisations. Users can share this information as WeChat Moments or directly with friends, and can report debtors themselves.

The Chinese government began developing its social credit system policy in 2011. The system rates citizens, businesses and authorities, and affects anything from loan approvals to permission to board flights. It is intended to be fully in place by 2020, but is already partially in operation.

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

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