Li Kangmeng, a female student at Nanjing Institute of Media and Communication, known as "the first person in the white paper revolution", has lost contact so far, causing concern.

(Reposted from Twitter)

[Compiled by Chen Chengliang/Comprehensive Report] After the "white paper revolution" blossomed everywhere in China, China continued to suppress the largest nationwide civil disobedience movement since the June 4th Incident in 1989. It was reported that the public security units had begun to use mobile phone data to arrest demonstrators. And it is rumored that under the strict monitoring of Skynet, even turning off the mobile phone signal is useless; in addition, Li Kangmeng, a female student from Nanjing Institute of Communication, who is known as the first person in the "white paper movement", has lost contact so far, which has attracted attention.

China's "White Paper Movement" has spread around the world through social media, but the use of modern technology has also made them the target of the police. It is reported that Chinese public security units have begun to use mobile phone signals to arrest demonstrators, and some protesters' mobile phones have been hacked. When it was confiscated and asked to provide a password as evidence, it has a strong meaning of settling accounts after autumn.

Please read on...

The New York Times reported that the Chinese police used facial recognition, mobile phone messages, and informants to find out the identities and residential addresses of people who participated in the protests, or just went to the protest sites, and warned them not to participate in the rally again.

Police use a cell phone signal tracking box, a stealthy device that simulates a base station, connects to nearby cell phones and captures their messages.

On overseas social media, many Chinese netizens shared ways to evade electronic surveillance. Some suggested using the phone's airplane mode and turning off the phone's location function, but the New York Times reported that some protesters who turned off the phone's GPS and face recognition functions also failed. Escape from police surveillance.

Liu Lipeng, editor of the China Digital Times website, said: "Even if you turn on the airplane mode, if your mobile phone is scanning the signal base station, it can record it... leave your device information."

On November 26, students from Nanjing Institute of Communication mourned the victims in Urumqi, Xinjiang. Li Kangmeng, a female student at the school, held up a blank paper to protest against the closure policy. Later, the blank paper was taken away from her hand, but she still stood. Many students responded and started the "White Paper Movement" that spread all over China.

According to the information on the integrated social platform Twitter (Twitter), Li Kangmeng has lost contact at present, and the outside world suspects that she has been taken away by the police.

In addition, in August this year, graffiti appeared on the streets of Beijing to protest the epidemic prevention policy. Zhang Donghui, a graduate of the Central Academy of Fine Arts, split up the phrase "Three years, I am numb" and painted it on the outside of multiple nucleic acid testing booths.

Zhang Donghui was suspected of being charged with the crime of picking quarrels and provoking trouble and was criminally detained. So far, there has been no news.