Female undergraduates at a top Chinese university can Watch V Onlinenow use their face to open doors.
The Beijing Normal University installed two facial recognition devices at entrances to the No. 13 female dorms in early May this year, according to state-run Beijing News.
SEE ALSO: China's latest robot police officer can recognise facesThe system -- which has been on trial for nearly three weeks -- is meant to deter intruders from entering the dorms through tailgating, say campus staff. If the system does not recognise a face, it will alert security.
Students can either swipe their student ID, key in their ID number, or say their name; the system then runs their face through a database and unlocks the door for residents it recognises.
Residents interviewed by Beijing Newssay that the system has been convenient.
One student told Beijing Newsthat when she logged her identity into the system, she had to take pictures from several different angles, so the database basically had a 3D model of her face.
Still, the machine's 97% recognition rate poses an inconvenience to some. "It's a bit slow -- sometimes I had to retry two to three times with different angles," another student, who declined to be named, said. "There's a little bit of lag with the system."
A student who said she lives in the No. 13 dorm told Mashablethrough Weibo that visitors are generally not allowed in dormitories unless approved by security.
"[Theft] wasn't common," the student, who asked to not be named, said, "but we've had unauthorized visitors come into the dormitories before."
The university is planning to install the system in its nine other female dorms if the trial is successful. We've contacted the school to find out more.
The system is one of many innovative applications of facial recognition technology that China has implemented.
Authorities have sought to use facial recognition technology to ration toilet paper in the Temple of Heaven, a Chinese tourist hotspot, while Baidu, the country's search giant, partnered with KFC to create a smart kiosk that would recognise repeat customers and suggest menu choices.
Still, scanning your face to go back to your dorm was a conversation starter on Weibo.
"It's great! Good for the system to stop men from coming in to women's dorms. If you want a date, go somewhere else instead of a dorm -- some men are just so shameless that they flirt with their girlfriend's roommates," one user joked.
Another was worried about long lines: "Do you have to queue to scan your face after class?"
Another user kept it real: "Our school also has one -- it's used to keep thieves at bay, not boyfriends."
Topics Facial Recognition
Ryan Reynolds just tweeted another perfect comeback to those marriage split rumoursWe can't ignore the role mental health plays in conspiracy theory beliefsTinder tests two'Stranger Things 4' heads to California for spring breakRyan Reynolds can't help himself when it comes to rumors about his marriage9 websites to download Lightroom presets to up your photography gameRIP canned laughter, the most evil innovation in TV historyFacebook and Instagram will no longer target ads based on race, politics, or religionThe Rock finally explains his beef with Vin Diesel on 'Fate of the Furious''Dexter: New Blood' is a ghost of its former self — for good and badCasey Neistat shares heartfelt video on YouTube shootingLawmakers come for Facebook algorithm with 'filter bubble' billRyan Reynolds can't help himself when it comes to rumors about his marriageGreat white shark greets Australian police at work on the waterAirbnb struggles to recover stolen domain name from sneaky thiefColin Kaepernick shares his truth on Netflix in a way you haven't heard beforeNeed a mental massage? Check out #PlotterTwitter.'The Harder They Fall' tells an epic story before it hits the opening titlesReviews for 'Dexter: New Blood' are in. Here's what critics think.The best new FaceTime features on iOS 15 Puerto Rico Sketchbook: The Artists with the Shovels The Wholesome Yet Filthy Comedy of Katya and Trixie The Inventions of Witches The Paris Review Staff's Favorite Books of 2017 How Original Are You? by Robert Shore On Making Oneself Less Unreadable Painting the American Dream at Guantánamo by Paige Laino ‘Women at Work’ Puerto Rico Sketchbook: There are dead in the fields The Dark Feels Different in November Puerto Rico Sketchbook: The Comic The Sentence That Folds Neatly in Half A Study of Kanai Mieko The Uncertain Future of the American Mall Redux: P. D. James, Walter Mosley, Georges Simenon by The Paris Review The Nexus of All Despair by Jane Stern Cocktails for Toasting the End of Patriarchy by Merrily Grashin A Number of Reasons David Sedaris Has Been Depressed Lately I Must Enter Again the Round Zion of the Water Bead Dominique Nabokov Photographs Artists’ Living Rooms
2.3738s , 10135.0390625 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【Watch V Online】,Creation Information Network