China's new 500MP 'super camera' can spot a face in a massive crowd

Dunya News

The technology was unveiled by researchers at China's International Industry Fair last week.

(Web Desk) – Scientists at the Fudan University and Changchun Institute of Optics, Fine Mechanics and Physics in China have developed a 500 megapixel cloud-connected ‘super camera’ that can identify every face in a crowd of tens of thousands – picking out facial details of any individual.

However, the new technology is raising serious concerns about privacy government monitoring, and civil liberty concerns about the rapidly advancing surveillance technology linked with artificial intelligence – as the facial recognition camera is four times more detailed than a human eye.

Dubbed as the ‘super camera’, the technology was unveiled by researchers at China’s International Industry Fair last week.

China currently has an estimated 200 million CCTV cameras watching over its citizens. For the past few years the country has been building a social credit system that will generate a score for each citizen based upon data about their lives, such as their credit score, whether they donate to charity, and their parenting ability.

Punishments and rewards that citizens will receive based upon their score include access to better schools and universities and restricted travel.

The current CCTV network is a central tool in gathering data about its citizens, but the cameras aren’t always powerful enough to take a clear picture of someone’s face in a crowd. The new 500 megapixel, or 500 million pixel, camera will help to remedy this.

The camera’s artificial intelligence will be able to scan a crowd and identify an individual within seconds. Samantha Hoffman, an analyst at the Australian Strategic Policy Institute, told the ABC that the government has massive databases of people’s images and that data generated from surveillance video can be "fed into a pool of data that, combined with AI processing, can generate tools for social control, including tools linked to the Social Credit System".