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Big Brother to Force Moscow’s Sleepy Cab Drivers to Take Breaks

Big Brother to Force Moscow’s Sleepy Cab Drivers to Take Breaks

(Bloomberg) --

Russia’s taxi drivers slog through long hours behind the wheel and are contributing to a surge in traffic accidents in the capital. They’re about to be forced to take more breaks.

To combat drivers nodding off, the country’s largest internet firm Yandex NV is installing facial-recognition technology in its ride-hailing unit that’ll cut off chauffeurs from taking new orders if necessary.

Big Brother to Force Moscow’s Sleepy Cab Drivers to Take Breaks

The move follows a draft law by the State Duma, the lower chamber of the Russian parliament, to start regulating operators of taxi apps such as Yandex to boost safety after crashes involving taxis surged 25% in Moscow last year.

Yandex.Taxi, co-owned by Uber Technologies Inc., will roll out the technology via a small device mounted to the windshield that’ll identify exhausted drivers. The software will track parameters like blinking, yawning and the person’s head slumping forward -- and potentially ban them from taking more orders. The software, based on technology from local vendor VisionLabs, monitors 68 facial points.

The approach is among tracking solutions being implemented by tech companies, car manufacturers and insurers that are pushing people to be safer drivers. Insurers in the U.K., for example, offer telematics policies that monitor the driver’s behavior behind the wheel to help calculate individual premiums that reward safe driving practices.

The number of accidents with taxis in Moscow, where Yandex is the market leader, surged to 764 cases including 23 deaths last year, according to the city hall. Officials are blaming the growing number of rides and long working hours of drivers, who tend to take orders from multiple apps. Nationwide, the number of accidents involving taxis also grew.

Yandex has piloted face-recognition for drivers in 100 cars and showed it to President Vladimir Putin in May during a meeting on artificial intelligence. It plans to roll out the measure to several thousands cars soon, it said.

To contact the reporter on this story: Ilya Khrennikov in Moscow at ikhrennikov@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Rebecca Penty at rpenty@bloomberg.net, Elisabeth Behrmann

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