Didi, recently in the swamp of passenger safety concerns, is testing in-car video recording.

Reported by local media iyiou.com (in Chinese), passengers may find an in-app notification asking whether to activate in-car recording for safety protection. According to Didiโ€™s response to iyiou.com, the function is not yet widely used, and not all Didi vehicles are equipped with a device.

Screenshot of Didiโ€™s video recording server notification. The reminder at the bottom reads: [Video] data will be stored encrypted. Drivers have no access to the content. In any case of service disputes, the video stored may be used as a reference.

Didi told TechNode that the recording trial started from the beginning of this year. Some vehicles in 5 pilot cities including Shenzhen and Nanjing are adopting the recording solution as the governmentโ€™s compulsory demand. Further future plans are still under the companyโ€™s internal discussion. The use of recording devices is also likely to provide evidence for regular service disputes.

โ€œDue to privacy concerns, the recording function will only be activated once a passenger confirms from their app. They can end it anytime during her ride,โ€ Didi explained to us.

Prior to the video recording test, Didi made several safety upgrades to alleviate usersโ€™ safety anxiety. The company shut down its hitch service from May 12 to May 19, after a 21-year-old female passenger were killed by a driver late in the night in Zhengzhou. Didiโ€™s available safety protection mechanisms include virtual contact number, in-car SOS dial, and several identity verification rules applied to drivers didnโ€™t prevent the tragedy from happening.

Also in May, there were already experts suggesting initiating video recording or CCTV for passengersโ€™ safety protection. Li Junhui, a researcher at China University of Political Science and Law, said (in Chinese) installing in-car cameras would be more practical than solutions such as audio recording.

According to Didiโ€™s latest operation data, its platform processes over 30 million rides daily in China alone.

Runhua Zhao is a technology reporter based in Beijing. Connect with her via email: runhuazhao@ovau.ip-ddns.com

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