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AI tool identifies Chinese products linked to Uyghur forced labour

Kuru

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I request all Chinese members and their cheerleaders to call this a propaganda and dismiss it as such.

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AI program flags Chinese products allegedly linked to Uyghur forced labor: 'Not coincidence, it's a strategy'​


Chinese-owned digital marketplace Temu may allow sellers to bypass US trade laws​


By Peter Aitken | Fox News
image.jpg


Tech firm Ultra has developed an artificial intelligence-powered tool it believes has helped analysts identify products coming from China through the platform Temu that were created using forced labor, possibly from the Uyghur population.

"We're looking at Temu from the perspective of the Forced Labor Prevention Act," Ultra founder and CEO Ram Ben Tzion told Fox News Digital. "How many things that we don't want are coming into the country using this method, right? The good cases are counterfeit. The worst cases are poor quality.

"I'm quite confident that illicit elements can find themselves going through this platform into the market, so it's time to demand accountability," he added. Ben Tzion’s company created the program Publican, which pulls in huge amounts of shipping data to analyze and look for patterns and red flags for any products with potential fraud issues.

Ultra found that the products on Temu would lead to non-indicative names and untraceable company information. But when compared to the same product on sister platform Pinduoduo in China, the company was able to see the products came from companies in Xinjiang, just eight miles away from known Ughyur detention centers or "cultural centers," as they are euphemistically called.

HOUSE DEMANDS PENTAGON ISSUE AI UPDATE AS THREATS FROM CHINA, OTHER ADVERSARIES PILE UP
China uyghur bypass

A laptop keyboard and Temu icon in the App Store is displayed on a phone screen in an illustration photo from Krakow, Poland, March 27, 2023. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Pinduoduo also allegedly bypasses users’ cellphone security to monitor activities on other apps, check notifications, read private messages and change settings.

"We have here a variety of products to show that this is not a one-off," Ben Tzion said. "My conclusion is that these products are possibly or very likely associated with or linked to shops either from Xinjiang or manufactured in Xinjian, and that in itself is a violation of trade policies."

Ben Tzion theorized that Temu could be an effort to bypass the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act(UFLPA), which establishes standards to refuse shipments of goods produced or manufactured wholly or in part in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China.

TECH CEO SAYS THERE WILL SOON BE AN ‘EXPLOSION’ IN AI-ASSISTED HUMAN CREATIVITY

Temu launched in 2022, developed by China-based PDD Holdings Inc. The app already has over 50 million downloads, with 16 million alone in 2022, making it the second-most used digital marketplace in the U.S. after Amazon. Temu sells clothing, groceries and pretty much any other product you can imagine for extremely low prices, such as $17 wireless earbuds, $1 "gold" necklaces and $23 wedding dresses.

The AI, developed and utilized in conjunction with the data analysis, allows Publican to examine immense data sets at incredible speeds to flag products with questionable pricing, quality or authenticity.

Uyghurs protest in DC


Supporters of the East Turkistan National Awakening Movement rally in front of the White House to commemorate the 13th anniversary of the July 5 Urumqi Massacre July 5, 2022, in Washington, D.C. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

"For the data aggregation, it is for partnering patterns, and we do use machine learning and automated inspection capabilities based on third-party models in the analysis of results," Ben Tzion said. "We automatically obtain information from thousands of publicly available digital sources and analyze it, and that allows us to determine the nature of every company and every product and to flag more than 160 different fraud patterns."

Ultra was founded in 2016 but only started developing Publican in 2019. The company finally released it in 2021 and started operating in the Middle East, Asia, Latin America, Europe and Africa, where it was able to flag products that displayed "fraud patterns."

Ben Tzion identified Temu as a potential source of fraud after seeing the prices for products, which he claimed just "don’t make sense."

"I believe that if something is either too good to be true or too cheap to be available, there is a reason behind it," Ben Tzion explained. "I wanted to see if we would be able to utilize our technology to understand what's happening here, and what was very visible at the get-go is this is something that was designed to hide the identity of products.

"The bigger picture here, the bigger story here is … the fact that Temu is, by design, exploiting and undermining the U.S. trade policies and economy," he stressed, saying there is no mistake that "this is by design."

China Kazakhstan


Large machinery loads containers at the China-Kazakhstan logistics Cooperation Base in Lianyungang, East China's Jiangsu province, March 14, 2023. (CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

"It is always cheap," he added. "Under de minimis, there are no duties or tax associates, therefore no inspection. Even using the international postage system is exploiting the U.S. economy … by design keeping products under tax and regulation thresholds."

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Shipments under $800 would escape inspection, potentially allowing Chinese companies making direct-to-consumer sales to bypass the UFLPA. This loophole, known as de minimis, prompted lawmakers on the Congressional-Executive Commission on China to look into ways to crack down on such shipments, though no such solution has yet arisen.

"This is why we have taken upon this task to bring it to the attention of both consumers and regulators that it's not coincidence. It's a strategy," Ben Tzion said.

Temu did not respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment by time of publication.
Fox News’ Kurt Knutsson and FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.
 
I request all Chinese members and their cheerleaders to call this a propaganda and dismiss it as such.

——————————————


AI program flags Chinese products allegedly linked to Uyghur forced labor: 'Not coincidence, it's a strategy'​


Chinese-owned digital marketplace Temu may allow sellers to bypass US trade laws​


By Peter Aitken | Fox News
image.jpg


Tech firm Ultra has developed an artificial intelligence-powered tool it believes has helped analysts identify products coming from China through the platform Temu that were created using forced labor, possibly from the Uyghur population.

"We're looking at Temu from the perspective of the Forced Labor Prevention Act," Ultra founder and CEO Ram Ben Tzion told Fox News Digital. "How many things that we don't want are coming into the country using this method, right? The good cases are counterfeit. The worst cases are poor quality.

"I'm quite confident that illicit elements can find themselves going through this platform into the market, so it's time to demand accountability," he added. Ben Tzion’s company created the program Publican, which pulls in huge amounts of shipping data to analyze and look for patterns and red flags for any products with potential fraud issues.

Ultra found that the products on Temu would lead to non-indicative names and untraceable company information. But when compared to the same product on sister platform Pinduoduo in China, the company was able to see the products came from companies in Xinjiang, just eight miles away from known Ughyur detention centers or "cultural centers," as they are euphemistically called.

HOUSE DEMANDS PENTAGON ISSUE AI UPDATE AS THREATS FROM CHINA, OTHER ADVERSARIES PILE UP
China uyghur bypass

A laptop keyboard and Temu icon in the App Store is displayed on a phone screen in an illustration photo from Krakow, Poland, March 27, 2023. (Jakub Porzycki/NurPhoto via Getty Images)

Pinduoduo also allegedly bypasses users’ cellphone security to monitor activities on other apps, check notifications, read private messages and change settings.

"We have here a variety of products to show that this is not a one-off," Ben Tzion said. "My conclusion is that these products are possibly or very likely associated with or linked to shops either from Xinjiang or manufactured in Xinjian, and that in itself is a violation of trade policies."

Ben Tzion theorized that Temu could be an effort to bypass the Uyghur Forced Labor Prevention Act(UFLPA), which establishes standards to refuse shipments of goods produced or manufactured wholly or in part in the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region in China.

TECH CEO SAYS THERE WILL SOON BE AN ‘EXPLOSION’ IN AI-ASSISTED HUMAN CREATIVITY

Temu launched in 2022, developed by China-based PDD Holdings Inc. The app already has over 50 million downloads, with 16 million alone in 2022, making it the second-most used digital marketplace in the U.S. after Amazon. Temu sells clothing, groceries and pretty much any other product you can imagine for extremely low prices, such as $17 wireless earbuds, $1 "gold" necklaces and $23 wedding dresses.

The AI, developed and utilized in conjunction with the data analysis, allows Publican to examine immense data sets at incredible speeds to flag products with questionable pricing, quality or authenticity.

Uyghurs protest in DC


Supporters of the East Turkistan National Awakening Movement rally in front of the White House to commemorate the 13th anniversary of the July 5 Urumqi Massacre July 5, 2022, in Washington, D.C. (Drew Angerer/Getty Images)

"For the data aggregation, it is for partnering patterns, and we do use machine learning and automated inspection capabilities based on third-party models in the analysis of results," Ben Tzion said. "We automatically obtain information from thousands of publicly available digital sources and analyze it, and that allows us to determine the nature of every company and every product and to flag more than 160 different fraud patterns."

Ultra was founded in 2016 but only started developing Publican in 2019. The company finally released it in 2021 and started operating in the Middle East, Asia, Latin America, Europe and Africa, where it was able to flag products that displayed "fraud patterns."

Ben Tzion identified Temu as a potential source of fraud after seeing the prices for products, which he claimed just "don’t make sense."

"I believe that if something is either too good to be true or too cheap to be available, there is a reason behind it," Ben Tzion explained. "I wanted to see if we would be able to utilize our technology to understand what's happening here, and what was very visible at the get-go is this is something that was designed to hide the identity of products.

"The bigger picture here, the bigger story here is … the fact that Temu is, by design, exploiting and undermining the U.S. trade policies and economy," he stressed, saying there is no mistake that "this is by design."

China Kazakhstan


Large machinery loads containers at the China-Kazakhstan logistics Cooperation Base in Lianyungang, East China's Jiangsu province, March 14, 2023. (CFOTO/Future Publishing via Getty Images)

"It is always cheap," he added. "Under de minimis, there are no duties or tax associates, therefore no inspection. Even using the international postage system is exploiting the U.S. economy … by design keeping products under tax and regulation thresholds."

CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

Shipments under $800 would escape inspection, potentially allowing Chinese companies making direct-to-consumer sales to bypass the UFLPA. This loophole, known as de minimis, prompted lawmakers on the Congressional-Executive Commission on China to look into ways to crack down on such shipments, though no such solution has yet arisen.

"This is why we have taken upon this task to bring it to the attention of both consumers and regulators that it's not coincidence. It's a strategy," Ben Tzion said.

Temu did not respond to a Fox News Digital request for comment by time of publication.
Fox News’ Kurt Knutsson and FOX Business’ Eric Revell contributed to this report.

Bonded labor is India’s most prevalent form of slavery, with about 18 million people working without pay in fields, brick kilns, rice mills, brothels or as domestic workers to repay debts to unscrupulous employers and moneylenders.



The number of child labourers in India is 10.1 million of which 5.6 million are boys and 4.5 million are girls.





Statistics show that as many as 100,000 people are trafficked into the US from abroad for forced labor every year. Most of them are from nearly 40 countries and regions such as India, Mexico, Vietnam, Africa and Central and South America. They are sold to sweatshops in the US working as coolies, not protected by any labor or employment laws and regulations. Research by the University of Pennsylvania found that there are at least 500,000 people in the US currently living in the conditions of modern slavery.

Moreover, it's estimated that between 15,000 to 50,000 women and children are forced into sexual slavery in the US every year, while a report by the University of Pennsylvania estimated the figure between 100,000 and 300,000 and one study from the Department of Health and Human Services put it between 240,000 and 325,000.

Worse, the US prison system is even more like a shelter of forced labor. The US has the world's largest prison system, with 2.3 million people currently incarcerated. According to the Black Agenda Report, people in US prisons have no legal protection and no right to refuse the use of their labor.

The US often touts its human rights achievements and ignores the international norms of human rights. The US is the only country in the world that has not ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child. The US only ratified two of the eight core international treaties concerning labor rights and is one of the countries that ratified the least number of relevant treaties.


 
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Under the name to save Xinjiang.

USA is actually choking the people of Xinjiang to death.

Good Xinjiang is a poor and backward Xinjiang.

Bad Xinjiang is a prosper and happy one.

To save Xinjiang, to make it good, is by choking the economy of local people there to death.


USA is never interested in human rights.

Human rights are just a political tool.

When I was a kid, I always heard a lot of 'good things' about how USA supports human rights.

But yet, I'm poor, my country is poor, and USA never came to save us.

USA even gave us an economic meltdown.

Even USA government doesn't care about homeless people of their own.

Then why preaching about human rights in the first place then??
 
Its sad but poor people always get exploited, that's just the way of the world.

Has been so forever, and will continue to be so in the future, India, China or the West.. it makes little difference.
 
When Chinese govt gets caught such as noted in the OP , instead of being ashamed and sorry about the genicidal ethnic cleaning atrocity in Xingian some people have chosen to quote nonsense about USA and India. This is obviously an implicit admission by them about the xingjiang news.

Ps: when it comes to human rights, Chinese govt attolrcities are at a totally different level and scale. It is laughable these weak attempts to compare to US and India
 
When Chinese govt gets caught such as noted in the OP , instead of being ashamed and sorry about the genicidal ethnic cleaning atrocity in Xingian some people have chosen to quote nonsense about USA and India. This is obviously an implicit admission by them about the xingjiang news.

Ps: when it comes to human rights, Chinese govt attolrcities are at a totally different level and scale. It is laughable these weak attempts to compare to US and India
Its only fools like you Indians and the Western whites believe the US fabrication that there are genocides in Xinjiang China. The slavery and killings of minorities in your la la land are real and beyond any scope, proud now. Since you Indians always want to talk all the supposedly "wrongs" in China all the time, let's also talk some of the real wrongs in your fools' paradise.
 
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Its only fools like you Indians and the Western whites believe the US fabrication that there are genocides in Xinjiang China. The slavery and killings of minorities in your la la land are real and beyond any scope, proud now. Since you Indians always want to talk all the supposedly "wrongs" in China all the time, let's also talk some of the real wrongs in your fools' paradise.
I’ve heard of your brand of media workers that make a living by just deflecting whatever ignominy Chinese govt gets caught at. Stale and robotic
 

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