Global Times

Zimbabwe gets facial ID tech

China exports first AI technology to Africa

- By Shan Jie

China is exporting facial recognitio­n technology to Zimbabwe as part of the Belt and Road initiative, which marks China’s first artificial intelligen­ce (AI) technology entry to Africa.

Cloudwalk, a company based in South China’s Guangdong Province, has signed a strategic cooperatio­n framework agreement with the Zimbabwean government for a mass facial recognitio­n project, according to a statement sent to the Global Times by Cloudwalk on Thursday.

The project will help the government build a smart financial service network as well as introduce intelligen­t security applicatio­ns at airports, railway stations and bus stations, said the Science and Technology Daily.

The company will also help build a national facial database in Zimbabwe, the newspaper reported Thursday.

“Zimbabwe has been suffering social security issues, including robberies and shootings, so the system could help in this area,” said Shen Xiaolei, an associate research fellow at the Institute of West Asian and African Studies in Beijing.

Facial recognitio­n in Africa faces an additional challenge: AI technology currently finds it more difficult to recognize faces with darker skin, Shen told the Global Times.

Cloudwalk is recalibrat­ing the system for darker skin metrics, Zhou Yuye, an employee at the Cloudwalk technology promotion department, told the Global Times.

Three-dimensiona­l light technology should be able to recognize faces without being affected by skin color or light, he said.

The company is also developing an AI system which can recognize different people from their gait, shape or haircut and could be added to facial recognitio­n, Zhou said.

By optimizing cameras to better highlight the features of people with darker skin tones, smartphone manufactur­er Transsion has become a top player in Africa’s fast-growing smartphone market, the Xinhua News Agency reported in August last year.

Shenzhen-based Transsion, whose products are sold under the Tecno, itel and Infinix brands, controls 40 percent of the African market.

Transsion has developed a technology that “enriches the luminance of the picture by locating eyes and teeth,” Economic Daily reported.

Zimbabwe and China agreed last week to establish a comprehens­ive strategic partnershi­p of cooperatio­n.

“Cooperatio­n between China and Zimbabwe is mainly on mines, agricultur­e, road constructi­on and tourism. Science and technology is not yet a priority,” Shen said.

This Chinese AI industry project in Africa could contribute to the economic developmen­t and technology sharing in countries along the Belt and Road initiative and realize the win-win goal of economic benefits, the Science and Technology Daily article said.

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