Last Sunday a church in China’s eastern-coastal Zhejiang province said believers must have their faces scanned or fingerprints registered before entering the sanctuary.
Wuxi Church claimed that an information statistics system has been established to make pastoral work more “targeted and refined.” It stated that the measure could reduce repetitive registration and prevent heresies and cults from seducing believers, assisting the church in preparing for the resumption of gatherings on weekdays, not just Sunday services.
Last month, the system was voluntarily produced by a local information system company ran by a Christian member of the church. Churchgoers need to have their temperature measured, their health codes and faces scanned, or provide their biometric data.
The company disclosed yesterday that the system consists of a phone terminal (WeChat account), back-stage management, and recognition terminal. Believers should register their personal information on the church's official account on WeChat, including name, birth date, education, identity card number, the fellowship they belong to, home address, emergency contacts, and phone number. The system will synchronize the data into the recognition terminal. Administrators can check records of admissions, analyzing the daily, weekly, monthly, and annual statistics.
If any cult member comes into the church, a special mark of his or her face would be made so that that person could not come again.
It added that there was no absolute privacy in the Internet age. Since the system protected people’s privacy by use of a password, there would be no problem if the administrators divulge nothing.
A church in Anhui also adopted the "facescan" approach to screen participants, but there were conflicts between the staff over privacy and security.
It has been universally observed and sufficiently documented that the restriction and suppression of Christian practice across China has been tightened and accelerated, but there is no direct evidence that related government agencies have ordered the churches to implement ID check and biometric data collection.
关于我堂人脸识别系统
信息登记的通知
各位弟兄姊妹:
为坚持做好疫情防控常态化工作,同时提升我堂针对性和精细化的牧养工作质量,我堂特建立了信徒信息数据管理系统,以便今后在聚会时采用人脸识别准入方式(即测温、扫码、刷脸进入),既减少防控登记时繁琐重复工作,又有效防止异端邪教不法分子进入堂内拉拢弟兄姊妹,保证聚会活动平稳有序,同时也为后期周间聚会的恢复做准备。为推进此项工作的开展,请弟兄姊妹按照以下操作流程录入个人信息,所采集的信息将进入本堂内部数据系统,请务必真实填写。具体操作步骤如下:
注意:(1)一个微信号只能录入一个人的信息;(2)免冠头像照片一栏必须上传自己本人照片,勿以其他图片代替;(3)如果有弟兄姊妹手机功能有限不便信息输入或者不会操作,散会后请到主堂、副堂门口的招待同工那里领取纸质版的信息填写表,在家中填写好信息下个礼拜天带来,到时在进堂入口处两边会有专门同工前来收取,收取信息表时还需要进行拍照以便后台输入。
请大家积极配合,如有不便之处,敬请谅解。
以马内利!
无锡市基督教堂2020年9月13日
Last Sunday a church in China’s eastern-coastal Zhejiang province said believers must have their faces scanned or fingerprints registered before entering the sanctuary.
Wuxi Church claimed that an information statistics system has been established to make pastoral work more “targeted and refined.” It stated that the measure could reduce repetitive registration and prevent heresies and cults from seducing believers, assisting the church in preparing for the resumption of gatherings on weekdays, not just Sunday services.
Last month, the system was voluntarily produced by a local information system company ran by a Christian member of the church. Churchgoers need to have their temperature measured, their health codes and faces scanned, or provide their biometric data.
The company disclosed yesterday that the system consists of a phone terminal (WeChat account), back-stage management, and recognition terminal. Believers should register their personal information on the church's official account on WeChat, including name, birth date, education, identity card number, the fellowship they belong to, home address, emergency contacts, and phone number. The system will synchronize the data into the recognition terminal. Administrators can check records of admissions, analyzing the daily, weekly, monthly, and annual statistics.
If any cult member comes into the church, a special mark of his or her face would be made so that that person could not come again.
It added that there was no absolute privacy in the Internet age. Since the system protected people’s privacy by use of a password, there would be no problem if the administrators divulge nothing.
A church in Anhui also adopted the "facescan" approach to screen participants, but there were conflicts between the staff over privacy and security.
It has been universally observed and sufficiently documented that the restriction and suppression of Christian practice across China has been tightened and accelerated, but there is no direct evidence that related government agencies have ordered the churches to implement ID check and biometric data collection.
Believers Must Have Faced Scanned before Entering Wuxi Church, Said to be More Convenient, Protect Against Cults