logo
South Korea deploys hologram police officer to fight crime – and it's working

South Korea deploys hologram police officer to fight crime – and it's working

A life-size hologram of a police officer, installed in a
South Korean park to boost public safety, is doing a good job preventing crime, with reports of criminal activities down by more than a fifth since it went up.
Standing at about 1.7 metres (5ft 6in) tall and dressed in full uniform, the Seoul Metropolitan Police Agency's 3D projection is based on a real-life officer, according to the E-daily newspaper.
As the hologram had to be on display in all seasons, the dress uniform was chosen as it was 'suitable for the entire year', an official from the police station told The Chosun Daily, adding that the hologram was popular with the sizeable foreign population in the area.
The digital officer appears nightly, glowing blue in the dark, between 7pm and 10pm at Jodong No 3 Park in central Seoul. It pops up every two minutes to deliver a pre-recorded audio message reminding passers-by that they are being watched by security cameras and that 'in the event of violence or other emergencies, the police will respond in real time' before disappearing.
Developed by South Korean tech company Hologrammica, it has been operating since last October under the city's 'Safe Park' programme, which targets areas prone to public disorders such as drunkenness and violent behaviour that need more policing.
And even though the hologram cannot intervene or make arrests like its flesh and-blood counterparts, its mere presence has had a psychological impact, officials say.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Kuaishou to pay first dividend since Hong Kong IPO as AI tools lift quarterly results
Kuaishou to pay first dividend since Hong Kong IPO as AI tools lift quarterly results

South China Morning Post

time5 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Kuaishou to pay first dividend since Hong Kong IPO as AI tools lift quarterly results

Advertisement The Beijing -based company said it would pay a special dividend of HK$0.46 per share after reporting better-than-expected financial results in the second quarter, driven by gains made from its artificial intelligence tools, according to its filing. Dividend payments to shareholders will be made on October 6. Second-quarter revenue rose 13.1 per cent to 35 billion yuan (US$4.87 billion), up from 31 billion yuan a year earlier. Profit attributable to equity holders was 4.9 billion yuan, compared to about 4 billion yuan a year ago. First-half revenue increased 12 per cent to 67.7 billion yuan, up from 60.4 billion yuan a year earlier. Profit reached 8.9 billion yuan, compared to 8.1 billion yuan a year ago. Kuaishou's shares closed down 0.21 per cent to HK$71.75 on Thursday, ahead of the earnings announcement. Its stock has gained nearly 80 per cent this year, but remains below its peak of nearly HK$400 in early 2021. Advertisement The declaration and payment of special dividends reflects not only Kuaishou's confidence in its long-term growth prospects, but also how AI innovation is expected to help drive growth at its main business segments. 'Quite a steady growth wouldn't have been possible without the trust and support of our shareholders,' chairman and CEO Cheng Yixiao said at Thursday's post-earnings call with analysts. 'We will consider measures, such as share repurchases and dividend payments, to reward our shareholders.'

Overseas AI data centre demand powers up China's diesel generator exports
Overseas AI data centre demand powers up China's diesel generator exports

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Overseas AI data centre demand powers up China's diesel generator exports

China's exports of diesel generator sets are on the rise as the global boom in artificial intelligence (AI) drives investment in data centres, which in turn is fuelling demand for reliable backup power systems – an area where diesel units remain critical. Analysts said diesel generator sets sell for higher prices overseas, opening up vast opportunities for overseas market growth. In the first seven months of this year, China exported 502,463 diesel generator sets, up more than 20 per cent year on year. The value of the shipments rose more than 28 per cent to US$2.52 billion, according to data released on Wednesday by the General Administration of Customs in Beijing. In July alone, China exported 74,962 diesel generator sets, registering an 8.2 per cent year-on-year increase, while the value climbed 22.9 per cent to US$382.55 million, customs data showed. The rise in diesel generator set exports comes as growing demand for AI services and related computing capacity drives investment in data centres , where diesel units play a critical role as backup power to keep them running during grid outages. Diesel generator sets made in China sell for around 3 million yuan (US$417,807) domestically and about 4 million yuan abroad, according to a note released by analysts at GF Securities this week. 'In the future, the valuation system for diesel generator sets will shift from domestic computing infrastructure benchmarks to international pricing, opening up vast opportunities in overseas markets and expanding long-term market value,' they said.

Tech war: DeepSeek hints China close to unveiling home-grown ‘next generation' AI chips
Tech war: DeepSeek hints China close to unveiling home-grown ‘next generation' AI chips

South China Morning Post

time6 hours ago

  • South China Morning Post

Tech war: DeepSeek hints China close to unveiling home-grown ‘next generation' AI chips

Chinese artificial intelligence start-up DeepSeek said that China will soon have home-grown 'next generation' chips for AI stacking, fanning speculation over breakthroughs China may have achieved. In a one-line note on its official WeChat account explaining the 'UE8M0 FP8 scale' of its newly released model V3.1, the Hangzhou-based firm said that the model was particularly designed 'for the home-grown chips to be released soon'. It did not specify the vendor of these chips or whether their use would be in the training of AI models or inferencing. In a technical paper explaining V3.1, which integrates reasoning and non-reasoning modes into one model, DeepSeek said the model was trained 'using the UE8M0 FP8 scale data format to ensure compatibility with microscaling data formats'. The disclosure hints that China has made key progress in building a self-sufficient AI stack consisting of domestic technologies, a development that could help the country shrug off US chip export restrictions. FP8, or floating-point 8 is an 8-bit data format that reduces precision to speed up AI training and inference by using less memory and bandwidth. UE8M0, a format with 8 bits for exponent and 0 bits for mantissa, could further increase training efficiency and in turn reduce hardware requirements, as it could cut memory use by up to 75 per cent. DeepSeek's use of these formats, if combined with China's domestic chips, could translate to a new breakthrough in hardware-software coordination. The revelation marks a bold claim from the company, which has been relatively quiet since it shocked the world with the release of its R1 reasoning model in January 2025 and its V3 model in December 2024. DeepSeek said its V3 model was trained on 2,048 Nvidia H800 chips. It did not disclose the chips it used to train R1 or V3.1.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store