China uses facial recognition to monitor ethnic minorities

Authored by engadget.com and submitted by johnmountain
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Managed by a state-run defense contractor, the so-called "alert project" matches faces from surveillance camera footage to a watchlist of suspects. The pilot forms part of the company's efforts to thwart terrorist attacks by collecting the biometric data of millions of citizens (aged between 12 to 65), which is then linked to China's household registration ID cards.

Beijing insists the strict security measures are necessary to tackle numerous incidents of violence and unrest, which it links to Islamic extremists. But activists, including Human Rights Watch, have condemned the policies as a "violation of international human rights norms." China has also been called out for restricting the religious freedoms of the region's 10 million ethnic Uyghurs, most of who are muslims, and for imposing travel restrictions on those belonging to the ethnic minority.

China boasts the world's largest monitoring system, with roughly 170 million CCTV cameras across the country, with plans to install 400 million new ones over the next three years. It now plans to add facial recognition to the mix with the help of AI firms in a bid to understand the mound of video evidence, and track suspects and even predict crimes (Minority Report style).

Darkqween on January 18th, 2018 at 18:51 UTC »

170 MILLION CCTV cameras let that number sink in people

spreud on January 18th, 2018 at 18:47 UTC »

Damn, a couple of days ago me and my friends were joking about "racial recognition."

taco_helmet on January 18th, 2018 at 17:52 UTC »

Well this comment section already a shit show. How to people always manage to turn anything into a partisan issue? It's incredible. Think for yourselves. People cant seem to be able to link something to their own reality unless someone tells them to care or until it kicks them in the nuts. Granted surveillance of foreign nationals isn't something most people care about, but you should. They're getting public support by targeting an unpopular minority to create an infrastructure that can potentially later be used against anyone. Tale as old as time. It's super effective.