Их Британийн засгийн газар цагаачдын насыг тогтооход хиймэл оюун ухаан ашиглахаар төлөвлөж байна

Published:

Энэхүү мэдээ, нийтлэлийг хиймэл оюун боловсруулав.

Хилийн албаны ажилтнуудад туслах зорилгоор нүүр царай таних технологид суурилсан нас тодорхойлох системийг 2027 он хүртэл хойшлуулжээ.

Их Британийн Дотоод хэргийн яам цагаачдын насыг тогтоох үйл явцыг хурдасгах, хуурамч мэдүүлгийг илрүүлэх зорилгоор хиймэл оюун ухаанд суурилсан “Face Age Estimation” (FAE) технологийг нэвтрүүлэхээр төлөвлөж байна. Энэхүү систем нь хүний дүгнэлтийг орлох бус, харин нэмэлт хэрэгсэл болох бөгөөд тодорхой бус тохиолдолд тухайн хүнийг насанд хүрээгүй гэж үзэн нэмэлт шалгалт хийхээр тогтжээ.

Технологийн туршилтын үр дүн нь тухайн хүний хүйс, арьсны өнгө болон гэрэлтүүлгээс шалтгаалан харилцан адилгүй байгаа нь анхаарал татаж байна. 2025 оны дөрөвдүгээр сард хийсэн дотоод тайлангаас үзэхэд, шилдэг гэх алгоритмууд нь Сахарын цөлийн бүсийн оршин суугчдын зураг дээр алдаатай үр дүн үзүүлж, 17 настай өсвөр насныхныг насанд хүрсэн мэтээр андуурах хандлагатай байжээ.

Их Британид жил бүр олон арван мянган хүн орогнол хүсдэг бөгөөд хилийн албаныхан одоогоор гадаад үзэмж, ярилцлагын хариулт дээр үндэслэн насыг тогтоодог. 2010 оноос хойш насны үнэлгээнд хамрагдсан хүмүүсийн 40 хувийг насанд хүрсэн гэж үзсэн статистик байна. Хэдийгээр технологийн нарийвчлалд эргэлзээтэй байгаа ч Дотоод хэргийн яам системээ үргэлжлүүлэн хөгжүүлж, бодит нөхцөлд ашиглахаар бэлтгэж байна.

Дэлгэрэнгүйг эх сурвалжаас харах

Эх сурвалжийг нээх ↓

While the Home Office says face scanning is designed to be an “additional” tool for border officers and won’t “replace or overrule human judgment,” it did not answer questions about how it plans to use the technology in real-world environments. “In cases of uncertainty,” the spokesperson says, “individuals will always be treated as children until a further assessment is conducted.”

Expanding Estimates

The UK government first announced its plans to use face age estimation alongside border staff judgments to assess migrants in July 2025. Since then, the Home Office has delayed the rollout of the systems until 2027, saying it will use the “cutting-edge AI tech” to “crack down on fake claims” with the aim of stopping “adults attempting to game the system.”

Over the past five years, AI face scans have emerged as a key component of controversial online age verification programs, as lawmakers have mandated social media platforms, porn websites, and some retailers check their users’ ages. It has also been trialled at some bars and shops in the UK. Face age estimation works by analyzing the features of someone’s face—with the underlying systems trained on millions of age-labeled faces—to produce an estimated age. In controlled laboratory tests, the best algorithms can predict a person’s age to within around 2.5 years.

However, the results can vary wildly depending on the algorithm, a person’s gender, demographic details, and other factors. Poor-quality images, such as those with bad lighting, can drastically reduce the performance of the systems. (A case in point: People have tricked some systems using images of characters from video games.) The Home Office appears to have been aware of potential problems with the technology and still pushed ahead with its program.

The leaked Home Office report produced in April 2025, which was completed before the government purchased face-scanning technology, details the testing of seven FAE algorithms against more than 2.5 million images. However, the internal report says that the unnamed “best performing algorithm” had “substantial deviations” when tested on images of Sub-Saharan Africans. On average, that system also tended to predict that a 17-year-old would be over 18, and it performed worse on females.

Tens of thousands of people make asylum claims in the UK each year, with many arriving in the country after dangerous, physically demanding journeys in small boats crossing the English Channel. Currently, border staff who doubt the age of someone claiming to be under 18 can assess their physical appearance, answers to interview questions, and general demeanor, to make an initial decision about their age. These initial age estimations are made upon the “first encounter,” the Home Office says in guidance. Since 2010, 40 percent of people who have faced age assessments have been classed as adults, according to official statistics.

The leaked Home Office report says that its findings are based primarily on testing that uses high-quality images taken of documented people, and that may mean that the algorithms’ accuracy rates would be even worse in practice. The Home Office has indicated that FAE technology would help immigration officers who are making age assessments while working at the point of first encounter.

- Зар сурталчилгаа -

Та юу гэж бодож байна?

Сэтгэгдлээ оруулна уу!
Please enter your name here

MFC.mn сайтад сэтгэгдэл оруулахад анхаарах зүйлс

Холбоотой

spot_img

Шинэ

spot_img