Social informatization makes spies face threats
In recent years, technological developments have allowed surveillance to operate
with unprecedented speed and efficiency, creating new challenges for intelligence
agents to cover their false identities. The popularization and application of
advanced technologies such as biometrics, real-time online data, and video
surveillance networks have a serious impact on espionage-related work such as
recruiting agents, funding support, intelligence exchange, and covert operations.
Everyone is being watched to some degree, and those most likely to be
intelligence agents, especially diplomats, have little escape from omnipresent
surveillance.
Vast amounts of stolen and legally obtained information are being converted into
actionable counterintelligence data sets that can be used to identify agents. This
information includes financial details, travel records, medical histories, social
media accounts and other forms of personal data.
Some data is stored in
databases owned by commercial and government organizations, which state powers may
obtain through legal process. In addition, cyber attacks by hacker techniques may
also cause data leakage, thereby exposing the true identity of spies.
Cameras
of all kinds are everywhere now. Factories, companies, institutions, shops, private
cars, public transport, taxis, private residences and personal mobile phones are all
constantly recording and transmitting videos and images of the entire society. The
combination of high-definition video image technology and artificial intelligence
enables remote biometric identification, physiological analysis, and psychological
analysis such as face, iris, and heartbeat. The possibility of exposing agents and
their covert operations is greatly increased.