Global Times

Facing the future

More govt services using facial recognitio­n, AI and robot technology

- By Li Ruohan

After the Spring Festival holiday, all 1,200 people who worked in a building in Beijing’s Haidian district government found they could enter without showing any credential­s, as their face was enough to get them inside the building.

A facial recognitio­n system has been installed at the three entrances, and it only takes seconds for someone to pass through, Ma Xiaochuan, the system’s project manager at the Beijing-based Zhonghai Investment company, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

The system can also alert security guards immediatel­y when a stranger is spotted trying to enter, said Ma.

In addition to collecting and analyzing the entrance informatio­n, the system can also help prevent cases of people borrowing or faking credential­s to intrude into the building, said the manager.

The move makes Haidian the first local government to use facial recognitio­n technology in Beijing. It is one of the technologi­es used for e-governance, a trend that has been on the rise in recent years across China due to the rapid developmen­t of big data and artificial intelligen­ce.

Wider usage

While the Internet was first used as an administra­tive tool in the early 2000s, the trend has only peaked in the past two years, after the technology matured and proved to be safe, Zhuang Deshui, deputy director of the Research Center for Government Integrity-Building at Peking University, told the Global Times on Tuesday.

In May 2017, the State Council, or China’s cabinet, released a timetable for central and local government­s to build e-governance platforms in a plan aimed at encouragin­g the use of Internet and smart technologi­es in government services.

By the end of August 2017, 29 provincial-level government­s had launched online platforms for administra­tive services, said a statement from the cabinet.

Using the facial recognitio­n technology, the public security department in East China’s Fujian Province has helped return 124 missing people to their families in three months, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

Xiamen in Fujian Province also began using facial recognitio­n in its medical system at the end of 2017. Doctors could only write prescripti­ons after logging in to the system, which could help prevent unqualifie­d doctors prescribin­g medicines, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

In Guangdong’s Liwan district, two auto-service machines at the district government’s service center can book and handle more than 800 administra­tive services including visa services and printing proof of tax-clearance, local newspaper New Express reported in January.

In November 2017, urban management and traffic police in Hefei, East China’s Anhui Province, jointly implemente­d a pre-warning system for parking infraction­s. Drivers are warned by text message if they park illegally and will not be fined if they relocate within 10 minutes.

The system prevented 50 parking violations on the day it was launched, the government website shows.

The use of robots is also on the rise in local government services in regions including Shaanxi and Guizhou province, as well as Shanghai and Shenzhen.

The robots can instruct citizens on online government services and help with printing or copying ID cards and documents.

In one simulated situation, a robot used by Shenzhen railway police during the Spring Festival travel rush collected the facial informatio­n of a suspected knife attacker and quickly uploaded the informatio­n to a database, which helped local police capture the suspect.

The cost of those systems varies according to the scope of use and technology, ranging from around 50,000 yuan ($7,920) to hundreds of thousands of yuan, service providers told the Global Times on Tuesday.

Security concerns

These systems can collect and analyze informatio­n to improve the allocation of resources according to users’ needs, said experts. Without feedback from users, it will be difficult to improve government services, while AI and e-government services can also help government­s solve complicate­d problems in remote areas, Zeng Ying, a project director at Fujian Huayu Education Technology Co, told the Global Times.

However, the technologi­es are not being widely applied due to security concerns, and some local officials are also refusing to delegate their power, said Zhuang.

Police in Nanjing, East China’s Jiangsu Province, found in a one-month public opinion survey that nearly half of those polled thought facial recognitio­n systems were unsafe, as they believed people could access their informatio­n using their photos.

Of the complaints received, 41 percent were about the recognitio­n service not functionin­g well in crowded or dark situations, while 31 complained about low recognitio­n speed, according to the investigat­ion released on the Nanjing government website.

To address the safety concerns, the Cyberspace Administra­tion of China will take the leading role in protecting private informatio­n collected in government systems and local government­s will be responsibl­e for data security when the informatio­n is collected, exchanged and used, according to a central government

statement.

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 ?? Photo: IC ?? A woman uses facial recognitio­n technology to access a building in Beijing’s Haidian district.
Photo: IC A woman uses facial recognitio­n technology to access a building in Beijing’s Haidian district.

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