Beijing bets on facial recognition in a big drive for total surveillance
Retweeted by David Fahrenthold: https://twitter.com/Fahrenthold
"Surveillance technologies are giving the government a sense that it can finally achieve the level of control over people's lives that it aspires to"
Total surveillance, Chinese Communist Party style, marrying facial recognition with big data and potentially even social credit scores. Not an episode of Black Mirror, but the fast-approaching reality of China.
Story by Simon Denyer Photos by Gilles Sabrié Video by Joyce Lee
JANUARY 7, 2018
Beijing bets on facial recognition in a big drive for total surveillance
CHONGQING, China
For 40-year-old Mao Ya, the facial recognition camera that allows access to her apartment house is simply a useful convenience. ... If I am carrying shopping bags in both hands, I just have to look ahead and the door swings open, she said. And my 5-year-old daughter can just look up at the camera and get in. Its good for kids because they often lose their keys.
But for the police, the cameras that replaced the residents old entry cards serve quite a different purpose. ... Now they can see whos coming and going, and by combining artificial intelligence with a huge national bank of photos, the system in this pilot project should enable police to identify what one police report, shared with The Washington Post, called the bad guys who once might have slipped by.
Facial recognition is the new hot tech topic in China. Banks, airports, hotels and even public toilets are all trying to verify peoples identities by analyzing their faces. But the police and security state have been the most enthusiastic about embracing this new technology.
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Shirley Feng contributed to this report.
Credits: Story by Simon Denyer. Photos by Gilles Sabrié. Video by Joyce Lee. Graphics by Chris Alcantara. Designed by Madalyne Bird.