請更新您的瀏覽器

您使用的瀏覽器版本較舊,已不再受支援。建議您更新瀏覽器版本,以獲得最佳使用體驗。

Eng

Chinese woman locked out of her digital life after nose job

Inkstone

發布於 2019年09月17日13:09

A young woman in eastern China found her life turned upside down when plastic surgery altered her appearance so drastically that she was banned from online payment gateways and unable to sign in to work.

The issues she faced underscore the extent to which daily life in urban China has come to rely on one's face, with the country embracing cameras and facial recognition technology.

The woman, who was identified only by the pseudonym Huan Huan, told her local television station in eastern China on the weekend that her troubles began a month before, after she had cosmetic surgery on her nose.

The change in her appearance was too much for China's widely-used facial recognition software, which was no longer able to identify Huan Huan, 21, from Wenzhou in the province of Zhejiang.

Speaking on Wenzhou City Television, Huan said she discovered she had been logged out of the online shopping and payment gateways she used because the secure identification process, backed by facial recognition technology, simply did not know who she was.

Surveillance cameras at a testing station in Hangzhou, China.
Surveillance cameras at a testing station in Hangzhou, China.

Huan said her work was also affected as she could no longer sign into and out of work by scanning her face.

Checking in to hotels and boarding high-speed trains had also become a problem as she had used facial recognition to register on those platforms, the report said.

"After the surgery, there was a big difference. Facial recognition could not recognize her as many key parameters had been altered. So I suggested that she update her ID card (to update her appearance in the system)," her doctor Xu Shuqing said.

Huan did not blame the facial recognition technology for her difficulties, admitting that her "entire face looks very different. Even my mom couldn't recognize me after the surgery," she said.

Despite all the trouble of updating her ID and registering her new face on all the online platforms she used, Huan said she was very happy with her new nose.

China has the third-largest market for cosmetic surgery in the world, behind the US and Japan.
China has the third-largest market for cosmetic surgery in the world, behind the US and Japan.

Huan's experience speaks to the growing popularity of cosmetic surgery in the country, which has proved a challenge for facial recognition technology.

In January, another woman, in Urumqi, Xinjiang, failed to pay a fine for a traffic rule violation because her face did not match the one stored in the police system, according to online news video platform Pear Video.

Officers at the police station where the woman tried to pay the fine accused her of using someone else's identity card, until she admitted she had undergone plastic surgery.

Copyright (c) 2019. South China Morning Post Publishers Ltd. All rights reserved.

0 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0
reaction icon 0