Articles:
Publications:

5 hours ago

Big Brother or big help? Japan trials AI facial recognition cameras to find missing people

Big Brother or big help? Japan trials AI facial recognition cameras to find missing people

A Tokyo ward has installed outdoor AI cameras with facial recognition capabilities to help locate missing children and elderly people, a move aimed at improving public safety but also raising privacy concerns in Japan. Arakawa ward installed 33... Read more.

More from South China Morning Post

Turn on Transparency.
Frankie Lor launches two-pronged attack in season finale feature at Happy Valley
Owner: Joseph Tsai is the chairman of Alibaba Group More info
Turn on Transparency.
North Korea’s Kim fires warning shot at own military with corruption purge
Owner: Joseph Tsai is the chairman of Alibaba Group More info
Turn on Transparency.
Europe recorded 10,000 excess deaths in late-June heatwave
Owner: Joseph Tsai is the chairman of Alibaba Group More info
More

Keep exploring Perspectify!

Create a free account and bring
more transparency to your news.

Already have an account? Log in.

Today's Media Watch

Your daily guide to the stories shaping media, journalism, and public trust.

Jul. 10, 2026
The Washington Post Joins Trump's Growing List of Media Lawsuit Losses
Neutral | Owner: The Poynter Institute for Media Studies
Jul. 10, 2026
Hackers Published Private Messages They Attribute to Journalist and Media Executive Ksenia Sobchak, Pointing to Supposed 'Agreements' Between Her Media Empire and Russian Officials
Neutral | Owner: Galina Timchenko
Jul. 10, 2026
Greek Roma Activist's Magazine Aims to Showcase 'Unknown History'
Neutral | Owner: Balkan Investigative Reporting Network

Learn About Our Fact-Based Transparency System

Our proprietary bias labels help you understand each outlet’s political orientation, editorial independence, and credibility based on factors like ownership, funding, affiliations, content, and media freedom. Learn more in the Perspectify FAQ.

Learn more