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AOT confirms facial recognition for international flights


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Posted

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Image courtesy of Pattaya News

 

By Ryan Turner

 

Airports of Thailand Plc (AOT) yesterday announced that the state-owned enterprise will implement facial recognition services at six major airports for international flights starting December 1.

 

The biometrics-based system will be deployed at Chiang Mai, Chiang Rai, Don Mueang, Hat Yai, Phuket, and Suvarnabhumi airports. AOT anticipates the new technology will significantly streamline the passenger experience, reducing checkpoint processing time for registered travellers from three minutes to just one minute.

 

Travellers can register for the automated biometric identification system through two primary methods: by working with airline staff at traditional check-in counters or by using common-use self-service (CUSS) check-in counters.

 

During registration, passengers will have their faces scanned into the system.

 

 

After completing registration, travellers will be able to use Common Use Bag Drop (CUBD) machines to check their luggage without needing to present their boarding passes or passports.

 

In compliance with the Personal Data Protection Act, AOT has committed to erasing all stored biometric data within 48 hours of registration.

 

The facial recognition service was initially introduced for domestic flights on November 1 and is now expanding to include international travel, reported Bangkok Post.

 

Source: The Thaiger

-- 2024-11-28

 

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Posted

hmmm… this facial recognition certainly makes the process quicker. Sometimes it used to take 2-3 hrs to get through , waiting forever in the queue that snaked back and forward towards the IO

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Posted

Doesn't the system in other countries eg Dubai, take a photo and compare it with that on your passport.

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Posted
14 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

During registration, passengers will have their faces scanned into the system.

Again?

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Posted
2 hours ago, bbbbooboo said:

hmmm… this facial recognition certainly makes the process quicker. Sometimes it used to take 2-3 hrs to get through , waiting forever in the queue that snaked back and forward towards the IO

and it hasn't even  started yet

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Posted

If the data is deleted after use that would mean you would have to queue up at the airline counter every time. That would seem to take a much longer time than before. 

My last trip was  Airasia dmk to sai. I bypassed the airline all together with my boarding pass on my phone. Then 5 minutes at passport control. 

Can't be much faster than that. 

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Posted
27 minutes ago, Bday Prang said:

and it hasn't even  started yet

Wait until it does start, the it has a glitch and stops again!:whistling:

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Posted

The problem for me is that when they scanned my face, the gate swung open and it said, Welcome HanSum Man.

 

I have to head to the states and change my name.

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Posted
1 hour ago, khunjeff said:

The responses all seem to be about immigration, but the system is meant to be about check-in, baggage drop, security, and boarding, in addition to immigration.

 

Since this is an AoT press release, they fail to mention that the only part of that process that AoT controls is security. Immigration will decide who can or can't use FR to pass through their gates, and the airlines will decide who - if anyone - can use it for check-in and at the gate. Since airlines are responsible for checking visas and passports for entry to destination countries, they are generally not as open to using fully automated systems for international flights as they are for domestic trips.

 

Still, if it speeds anything up, sure, why not. (If you entered the country legally, and especially if you ever got an extension of stay, the Thai government already has your picture, so don't fantasize that they're grabbing your soul by saving your photo.)

A lot of hotels have my picture on my passport as well,  I don't know how long they keep them. The government has my picture and my wife in our bedroom, outside the house.  They have had dozens of copies of my signature, many in one visit to immigration. Most are unreadable but there are a few where they've asked me to do it like it is in my passport.

Posted (edited)
2 hours ago, khunjeff said:

The responses all seem to be about immigration, but the system is meant to be about check-in, baggage drop, security, and boarding, in addition to immigration

 

AOT published an announcement explaining how the system works and what it simplifies.

The facial recognition eliminates 'the need to present a passport or boarding pass at baggage drop, security checks, and boarding.' Immigration will not leverage this new system.

 

The data are solely used only to ensure that the passengers boarding the plane are the ones whose names are printed on the boarding cards and on the airline manifest. This also explains why the data can be deleted after only 48 hours.

 

The benefit in terms of time saving will be greater the higher the number of passengers who use facial recognition.

 

AOT rolls out Biometric System to enhance passenger experience across six airports - TAT Newsroom

 

Edited by AndreasHG
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Posted (edited)

Don't they already take your picture when you enter the country?  Anyway, why not, if it makes for a smoother process at the airport? 

 

I've seen this at work in the Seoul Korea airport at the Delta check-in.  Look at the camera and your passport picture pops up.  

Edited by jas007
Posted
4 minutes ago, jas007 said:

Don't they already take your picture when you enter the country? 

 

Yes, but this new system has nothing to do with Immigration. It is only intended for baggage drop, security checks, and boarding.

Posted
15 minutes ago, AndreasHG said:

 

Yes, but this new system has nothing to do with Immigration. It is only intended for baggage drop, security checks, and boarding.

 

The picture accompanying the OP shows immigration staff and the facial recognition and biometrics scanners at inbound immigration.

 

Outbound immigration has these scanners. If your passport is machine readable with a chip, you use these gates with no interaction with an immigration person required. If there's an issue and passing through is declined, the passenger will be referred to the few manned immigration booths that still exist. For info, the chip embedded in my passport doesn't work, so the scan was refused and I used the old fashioned way. From my observations yesterday mid-afternoon, the self-scan is very fast and trouble-free with few referrals to the manned kiosk. There was only a couple or three people queueing there.

 

With regard to the check-in, bag-drop to boarding system mentioned by AoT in the OP, this system is separate but runs in parallel with the immigration self-scan system.

 

The airline self-service kiosks are capable of taking your picture as part of this process. It is not fully implemented yet but when it is, the facial picture will be linked to the boarding pass QR code. When the passenger scans their boarding pass to go "air side", their face will be scanned and compared with the check-in picture. Once though immigration (as above), and while boarding at the gate, the QR code and face will be checked a final time for a match.

 

Earlier news articles talked about eventually eliminating boarding passes but since a lot of passengers can't even find their assigned seat while having a boarding pass let alone the correct gate, I don't see facial recognition as ever being the ONLY way to pass through airports.

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Posted

Great in theory but….

If they delete the biometric data after 48 hours, doesn’t that mean we’ll need to re-register every time we fly? If so, this will make check in queues slower, simply transferring the problem to a different part of the process? 
Also if the law requires deletion of data, does that also apply to the requirement to be photographed every time we arrive or leave? In which case it’s a useless requirement
 

Posted
19 hours ago, snoop1130 said:

The facial recognition service was initially introduced for domestic flights on November 1 and is now expanding to include international travel,

 

WRONG! I flew from Chiang Mai to Bangkok (DMK) on the 14th November and the facial recognition system at the Air Asia check-in desk was not working. All passengers were lined up checking as normal. In fact the camera was covered by a display placard informing of cabin baggage size and weight.

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