Bangkok Post

Beijing eyes face scans for city’s metro

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BEIJING: Beijing will use facial recognitio­n tools to speed up security checks in the city’s overcrowde­d metro, using a “credit system” to sort passengers into different channels, state-run media reported yesterday.

Long queues and commuters arguing with staff over slow security procedures are common sites during rush hour in the metro system of the 20 million-strong metropolis.

The city plans to install cameras that will scan the faces of passengers as they enter a subway station and sort them into different security channels, said Zhan Minghui, director of the Beijing Rail Traffic Control Centre.

He said the plan involves creating a “passenger credit system”, and individual­s on a “white list” will be offered expedited security clearance, Beijing

Youth Daily reported.

Those who receive “abnormal feedback” after their faces are scanned will be subjected to extra checks.

Mr Zhan did not offer details on the criteria used to sort passengers or what could trigger that type of feedback.

“The technique aims to improve the efficiency of security checks and includes both body checks and luggage screening when large numbers of passengers enter the station,” he told an urban transporta­tion forum in Beijing on Tuesday.

The Beijing subway in May announced it has started “deducting credit points” from passengers who eat in railway carriages.

The city’s subway system currently handles over 12 million trips on a work day and the number is expected to increase to 17 million trips by 2022.

Mr Zhan did not offer a timetable for rolling out the technology.

Facial recognitio­n is gaining traction across China, where it is being used for everything from supermarke­t checkouts to surveillan­ce.

While researcher­s have warned of the privacy risks associated with gathering facial recognitio­n data, consumers have widely embraced the technology.

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