The so called "reporter" from uk got pwned gaogao during this press conference. Can Start from around 36min mark in the fb link.
https://www.facebook.com/TMHK.ORG/videos/470455433676099/
People conferencing about HK and how the western country is trying to destabilize China and HK he come ask question about XingJiang.
Ask him to state his name and where he is from before he ask question then he become like mouth got ** / balls suddenly drop speak damn soft until the spokes person gotta ask him to repeat again. LOL
(11 Nov 2019) Smashing surveillance cameras and wearing masks symbolizing dissent, Hong Kong's protesters are going to extreme lengths to conceal their identities.
It may sound like paranoia, but some Hong Kong residents believe they are living in the shadow of Big Brother.
Hong Kong's protesters are fighting for political reform and police accountability. But their tactics also illustrate how they're on the frontlines of the battle against China's technology-powered authoritarianism and its spread across the globe.
Across the border in mainland China, high-tech surveillance is ubiquitous, with facial recognition, forests of cameras and other privacy-penetrating policing tools to help the Communist Party track what citizens are doing and to weed out dissent.
"We are afraid that Hong Kong will become Xinjiang 2.0," said one masked protester, referring to the far western province of China that has been blanketed with a massive surveillance network equipped with facial recognition technology.
The protester was wearing a Guy Fawkes mask from the movie "V for Vendetta," which has come to represent a global anti-government protest movement.
He said demonstrators wear masks to protest Hong Kong's facial recognition system.
Another masked protester worried about Chinese tech companies using popular apps such as TikTok to possibly scan facial features that could be used by the Chinese government.
Charles Mok, a Legislative Councillor representing the Information Technology Functional Constituency, said the West is moving in a similar direction with pervasive surveillance technology.
In Britain, privacy activists have launched legal fights against police forces in Wales and London that have been running trials of live facial recognition technology, which automatically matches faces on screen to watchlists of wanted people.
The activists say it has undertones of Big Brother.
Authorities in Belgrade launched a major surveillance project created by Chinese telecommunications company Huawei, which includes hundreds of facial recognition video cameras.
They say it helps reduce crime but critics contend it erodes personal freedoms, makes political opponents vulnerable to retribution and even exposes citizens to snooping by the Chinese government.
Besides Serbia, the list of countries using Huawei's so-called Safe Cities technology includes Turkey, Russia, Ukraine, Azerbaijan, Angola, Laos, Kazakhstan, Kenya and Uganda, as well as a few liberal democracies like Germany, France and Italy. The system is used in some 230 cities, exposing tens of millions of people to its screening.
3:15 China uncle knows what the cctv is for.
17:20, 27:00 onwards got good stuff.