SUPER IDOL LOUD VERSION

Details
Title | SUPER IDOL LOUD VERSION |
Author | thegamerguy |
Duration | 0:14 |
File Format | MP3 / MP4 |
Original URL | https://youtube.com/watch?v=6kUCul4nERg |
Description
https://discord.com/invite/kcsku2E
About
Super Idol 的笑容都没你的甜 refers to cropped lyric from a Chinese song titled 热爱105°C的你 (Rè'ài 105°C de nǐ. Eng. You Who Love 105°C) by 阿肆 (Eng. ASi). The song gained popularity after Douyin user Zmcmtianyiming sang the song on his video. Online, it has been paired with various China-themed memes, similar to Chin Cheng Hanji and Xue Hua Piao Piao.
In the summer of 2021, Douyin user Zmcmtianyiming uploaded a video of himself singing a song titled 热爱105°C的你 by 阿肆. At the end of the video, he splashes a bottle of water at the camera man. The video has been removed, but was reuploaded on September 18th, 2021 by YouTube[1] user vector. The video received 27,000 views in one month
The Social Credit System (Chinese: 社会信用体系; pinyin: shèhuì xìnyòng tǐxì) is a national credit rating and blacklist being developed by the government of the People's Republic of China.[1][2][3] The social credit initiative calls for the establishment of a record system so that businesses, individuals and government institutions can be tracked and evaluated for trustworthiness.[4][5] There are multiple, different forms of the social credit system being experimented with,[6][7] while the national regulatory method is based on blacklisting and whitelisting.[8][9] The program is mainly focused on businesses, and is very fragmented, contrary to the popular misconceptions that it is focused on individuals and is a centralized system.[10][11]
The program initiated regional trials in 2009, before launching a national pilot with eight credit scoring firms in 2014.[12][8] It was first introduced formally by then Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao on October 20, 2011, during one of the State Council Meetings.[13] Managed by the National Development and Reform Commission (NDRC), the People’s Bank of China (PBOC), and Supreme People's Court (SPC),[13] the system was intended to standardize the credit rating function and perform financial and social assessment for businesses, government institutions, individuals, and non-government organizations.[1][14][15]
The Social Credit System is an extension to the existing financial credit rating system in China.[16] The origin of the system can be traced back to the 1980s when the Chinese government attempted to develop a personal banking and financial credit rating system, especially for rural individuals and small businesses that lack documented records.[17] The Chinese government aims to enhance trust in the society with the system and regulate businesses regarding issues such as food safety, intellectual property theft, and financial fraud.[16][17][18]
Supporters claim that the system helps to regulate social behavior, improve the perceived "trustworthiness" of citizens (which includes paying taxes and bills on time), and promote traditional Chinese moral values.[19][20] Critics of the system, some of them stemming from misconceptions according to Mercator Institute for China Studies,[10] claim that it oversteps the rule of law and infringes the legal rights of residents and organizations, especially the right to reputation, the right to privacy as well as personal dignity, and that the system may be a tool for comprehensive government surveillance and for suppression of dissent from the Chinese Communist Party (CCP).[21][22][23] Aside from controversies and concerns, the Social Credit System also generated a large amount of misreporting and misconceptions in the media due to translation errors, sensationalism, conflicting information, and lack of comprehensive analysis.[6][24][25][26] Examples of these misconceptions include widespread misassumption that Chinese citizens are rewarded and punished based on a numerical score assigned by the system, that its decisions are taken by AI and that it constantly monitors Chinese citizens.
Overview
Social Credit System refers to a national social credit system used to provide Chinese citizens and businesses with a score using mass surveillance and data analysis. The system has been widely criticized as Orwellian and authoritarian by privacy advocates. In 2021, the system became a subject of memes, primarily of reaction images and videos awarding or deducting social credit score.
#memes
#socialcredit
#china