China to use facial recognition to thwart scalpers

AP  |  Beijing 

Chinese hospitals are using to identify people who sell doctors' appointments at an illegal markup, the latest application of an emerging technology that is being used in places to tighten control over the country's 1.4 billion people.

More than 30 hospitals in have installed the technology and have already identified more than 2,100 individuals who appear regularly to make appointments, then turn around and sell them to others for a profit, said Sunday.

Chinese public hospitals require patients to line up for appointments on the day they wish to see a doctor, creating a lucrative secondary market for scalpers to sell them better numbers and save on waiting time.

China's markets are rife with counterfeit goods and fraud, and has been aggressively applying technology in everything from distribution of toilet paper by public lavatories to identifying jaywalkers virtually in

It's among the technologies that is deploying also including the processing of big data, buying habits and genetic sequencing to increase the party's store of personal information about individual citizens.

Such data is being fed into a system of "social credit" that rewards or penalizes individuals based on their behaviour.

Those with offenses ranging from failure to pay taxes and fines to walking a dog without a leash can face punishments including being barred from buying tickets for flights or seats on the country's high-speed trains.

Human rights activists say "social credit" is too rigid and might unfairly label people as untrustworthy without telling them they have lost status or how they can win it back.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sun, February 24 2019. 13:35 IST