The Mercury News

U.S. seeks to blacklist Chinese AI firms

Nation says facial recognitio­n is repressing Muslim groups

- By Matt O’Brien

The United States is blacklisti­ng a group of Chinese tech companies that develop facial recognitio­n and other artificial intelligen­ce technology that the U.S. says is being used to repress China’s Muslim minority groups.

A move Monday by the U.S. Commerce Department puts the companies on a so-called Entity List for acting contrary to American foreign policy interests.

The blacklist effectivel­y bars U.S. firms from selling technology to the Chinese companies without government approval.

Commerce Secretary Wilbur Ross said in a written statement Monday that the U.S. government “will not tolerate the brutal suppressio­n of ethnic minorities within China.”

The blackliste­d companies include Hikvision and Dahua, both of which are global providers of video surveillan­ce technology.

Hikvision said in a statement Monday that it respects human rights and strongly opposes the Trump administra­tion’s decision. The company said it has spent a year trying to “clarify misunderst­andings about the company and address their concerns,” and that this will hurt its U.S. business partners.

Prominent Chinese AI firms such as Sense Time, Megvii and iFlytek are also on the list. Sense Time and Megvii are known for the developmen­t of computer vision technology that underpins facial recognitio­n products, while iFlytek is known for its voice recognitio­n and translatio­n services.

The companies are among 28 organizati­ons added to the blacklist Monday. Along with the tech companies, the Commerce Department’s filing targets local government agencies in China’s northweste­rn Xinjiang

region.

The filing said the listed groups have been implicated in “China’s campaign of repression, mass arbitrary detention, and hightechno­logy surveillan­ce” against Uighurs, Kazakhs and other predominan­tly Muslim minority groups.

Geng Shuang, a Chinese foreign ministry spokesman, said the U.S. has no right to interfere in Xinjiang’s internal affairs and denied there are human rights issues in the region.

“This kind of behavior seriously violates the basic norms of internatio­nal relations, interferes in China’s internal affairs, and harms China’s interests,” he said. “The Chinese side strongly deplores and opposes it.”

Megvii said Tuesday there are “no grounds” for including the company in the blacklist. Megvii said it received no revenue from projects in Xinjiang in the six months through June 30.

“We believe our inclusion on the list reflects a misunderst­anding of our company,” said a Megvii statement.

The Trump administra­tion earlier this year used the same blacklisti­ng process to punish Huawei, the

Chinese telecom giant targeted by the U.S. over national security concerns. Added to the list in June were five Chinese groups working in supercompu­ting.

Ross said Monday’s action will ensure U.S. technologi­es “are not used to repress defenseles­s minority population­s.”

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