Global Times

Thousands of kids register with ‘eye bank’

- By Liu Xuanzun

Over 93,000 Chinese children have registered for the country’s iris informatio­n repository, which was designed to help police identify lost children with iris recognitio­n technology.

More than 400 workstatio­ns that use the repository has been set up in Chinese cities since April 2017, with over 93,000 iris patterns of Chinese children registered as for now, Zhang Jing, a spokespers­on at Zhaobao Technology (Shanghai) Co Ltd, told the Global Times on Monday.

The Children’s Iris Informatio­n Repository, formerly called the Anti-loss Iris Network Platform for Chinese Kids, is an iris informatio­n cloud platform developed by the Zhaobao Technology.

The latest workstatio­n was establishe­d in Qionghai, South China’s Hainan Province on Sunday, Hainan-based newspaper Nanguo Morning Post reported.

The workstatio­n allows parents to register their children’s iris informatio­n to the repository. Children need to go to the workstatio­n to register, which will be unchanged and unique once children reach eight months, the report said.

In the event children get lost or are abducted, police can quickly confirm their identities by comparing their iris informatio­n with those stored in the repository, and report the incident to their parents, according to a statement sent by the Zhaobao Technology to the Global Times on Monday.

The error rate of iris recognitio­n is about one in a million, far lower than facial and fingerprin­t recognitio­n, the Xinhua News Agency reported.

“Registrati­on is voluntary. But we are facing some difficulti­es because some parents are concerned over the safe use of their children’s informatio­n,” said Zhang.

The company claims registerin­g only takes a few seconds and will do no harm to children’s health, adding that the platform has passed China’s Ministry of Public Security verificati­on.

Over 2,000 workstatio­ns are planned in China by 2019.

China solved 3,713 child traffickin­g cases from 2013 to 2016, Xinhua reported.

China establishe­d a child safety emergency response platform in 2015, which uses smartphone social applicatio­n WeChat to alert police and volunteers if the children get lost, Xinhua reported.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from China