インシデントのステータス
CSETv1 分類法のクラス
分類法の詳細Incident Number
36
AI Tangible Harm Level Notes
3.5 - Although no harm occurred because the mistake was identified, Risk to the affected party was imminent.
Special Interest Intangible Harm
no
Date of Incident Year
2018
Date of Incident Month
11
Date of Incident Day
21
インシデントレポート
レポートタイムライン

Chinese AI traffic cam mistook a bus ad for a human and publicly shamed the CEO it depicted for jaywalking
China's war on jaywalking went to the next level last spring when AI-based facial recognition systems were integrated into some cross…

Cities across China have debuted crime-fighting facial recognition technology to much fanfare over the past year. But some of these jaywalker-busting devices aren’t as impressive as they seem.
A facial recognition system in the city of Ning…
China’s facial recognition systems are used to catch all types of criminals, from thieves to jaywalkers, in real time. This week, one facial recognition camera publicly shamed a famous business woman for jaywalking after its systems caught …

NurPhoto
China is increasingly dependent on facial recognition systems to name and shame citizens who jaywalk, but it reportedly hit a snag this week.
A camera at an intersection in the eastern city of Ningbo named famous businesswoman Dong…
While China has moved ahead of the rest of the world in making facial recognition technology a part of people’s everyday life, there are systems in the country that need tweaking.
Making a compelling case for change is the recent experience…
The face of Dong Mingzhu, chairwoman of Shenzhen-listed Gree Electric Appliances, is splashed on a huge screen erected along a street in Ningbo, a city in the eastern coastal province of Zhejiang, to display the images of people caught jayw…

China hasn't been shy about using facial recognition tech to catch jaywalkers, and publicly shame them.
The technology aims to dissuade bad behaviour by recognising the offender's face, checking it with a database, then posting their inform…
While China has moved ahead of the rest of the world in making facial recognition technology a part of people’s everyday life, there are systems in the country that need tweaking. Making a compelling case for change is the recent experience…

IF YOU RELY on facial recognition for aspects of your criminal justice system, you'd better hope it's reliable. So it may be reassuring to people concerned that China would use the technology to casually violate human rights that it's foole…

The police have since deleted the infraction and claim they've upgraded the facial recognition technology to "reduce the false recognition rate," although it's unclear just what they could have done to address this specific issue.
While com…














