Yesterday the Ministry of Interior announced they’ll be installing new intelligent AI-powered traffic cameras. The new cameras are meant to automatically detect seat belt violations, and drivers using their phones while driving. This isn’t the first time the MOI announced automated monitoring. Back in January 2023, the MOI announced they were installing new smart cameras that could detect both those violations, but that never materialized for some reason.
Although not much information was shared yesterday regarding the new cameras, based on some research I did there are a couple of companies that provide these traffic cameras, including Acusensus and VITRONIC. VITRONIC recently installed AI cameras in the UAE and have a Middle East office so it’s very probable those are the ones we are getting.
No matter which brand we are getting, they all work similarly:
- The traffic cameras capture high-resolution images of approaching vehicles.
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Artificial intelligence (AI) software filters the images to detect possible mobile phone use, or failure to wear a seatbelt by the driver and front seat passenger.
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If AI does not see a potential violation, it will reject the image.
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If AI detects a driver who may be using a phone or not wearing their seatbelt, it flags the image for further review.
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Images which are flagged for potential violations are then checked and verified by an officer.
So AI won’t be issuing tickets automatically, violations will still be double checked by a real person which is good news. These new AI cameras are also really effective. In Australia they trialed a similar AI traffic camera and in the first month alone, 1,500 drivers and 225 passengers were caught not wearing seatbelts, and almost 1,200 drivers were caught using their mobile phones.
Not sure how bad seatbelt violations are, but I’m really hoping this will stop people using their phones while driving since they’re the most annoying drivers.
4 replies on “Kuwait’s New AI Traffic Cameras Explained”
The MOI is already recording 50k+ traffic violations a week, I can’t imagine how high that number will go when such systems come into action.
Either way, this is probably the best solution to get people to behave in a civil manner on the road, by hitting them where it hurts (their wallets).
yes l agree with u,hope people will realise the dangerous acts they r doing by using mobiles and no seat belts
Is it for both driver and passenger? If so, does the registered car owner get double tickets? Or a single ticket if the passenger isn’t wearing one?
Very good & nice job traffic sector also need update 🤝