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The study of technologies and infrastructures designed to manage the behavior, movement, and communication of entire populations at scale. This theory focuses on the industrial-age and digital-age machinery of control: census bureaus, national identification systems, surveillance networks, predictive policing algorithms, credit scoring, and social credit systems. Unlike localized control (a teacher in a classroom), mass control systems are impersonal, automated, and operate through data. The theory examines how states and corporations shift from disciplining individuals to modulating populations.
Mass Social Control Systems Theory Example: China's Social Credit System is the archetypal Mass Social Control System—a nation-scale behavioral scoring infrastructure. Less dramatic but equally pervasive examples include E-ZPass tracking (your movement is logged), Amazon's predictive ordering (your consumption is anticipated), and health insurance risk algorithms (your future is priced). These systems don't need to arrest you; they simply make non-compliance increasingly inconvenient, expensive, or invisible.
by Dumu The Void February 11, 2026
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