
Malaysia's AI speed trap plan sparks anger, critics say deadly lorry crashes more pressing
The government's proposed Automated Awareness Safety System (Awas) would calculate a vehicle's average speed by tracking the time taken to travel between tollgates. Those found exceeding the speed limit would be issued an automatic fine of up to 300 ringgit (US$70), without any human oversight.
The transport ministry had scheduled two pilot tests on accident-prone highways in June but has since paused the roll-out, a ministry spokesman told This Week in Asia on Tuesday.
Still, public anger has not subsided, with many Malaysians saying the plan would unfairly penalise drivers while allowing larger – and more dangerous – road safety threats to persist.
01:45
Asean leaders sign Kuala Lumpur Declaration as Malaysian PM warns of 'unsettled' international order
Asean leaders sign Kuala Lumpur Declaration as Malaysian PM warns of 'unsettled' international order
'There are so many other useful things that MoT can do, but they choose to carry out ridiculous things like this,' read a Facebook comment on a post discussing the speed trap system, referring to the Ministry of Transport by its acronym.
'Do they understand that accident statistics involving lorries are alarming? No solution in sight only burdening the people.'
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


South China Morning Post
6 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
‘Global approach' to AI regulation urgently needed, UN tech chief says
The world urgently needs to find a global approach to regulating artificial intelligence, the United Nations' top tech chief said this week, warning that fragmentation could deepen risks and inequalities. Doreen Bogdan-Martin, head of the UN's International Telecommunications Union (ITU) agency, said she hoped that AI 'can actually benefit humanity.' But as concerns mount over the risks posed by the fast-moving technology – including fears of mass job losses, the spread of deepfakes and disinformation, and society's fabric fraying – she insisted that regulation was key. 'There's an urgency to try to get … the right framework in place,' she said, stressing the need for 'a global approach.' Her comments came after US President Donald Trump this week unveiled an aggressive, low-regulation strategy aimed at ensuring the United States stays ahead of China on AI. Among more than 90 proposals, Trump's plan calls for sweeping deregulation, with the administration promising to 'remove red tape and onerous regulation' that could hinder private sector AI development.


South China Morning Post
8 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
Global AI regulation urgently needed, UN tech chief says
The world urgently needs to find a global approach to regulating artificial intelligence, the United Nations' top tech chief said this week, warning that fragmentation could deepen risks and inequalities. Doreen Bogdan-Martin, head of the UN's International Telecommunications Union (ITU) agency, said she hoped that AI 'can actually benefit humanity.' But as concerns mount over the risks posed by the fast-moving technology – including fears of mass job losses, the spread of deepfakes and disinformation, and society's fabric fraying – she insisted that regulation was key. 'There's an urgency to try to get … the right framework in place,' she said, stressing the need for 'a global approach.' Her comments came after US President Donald Trump this week unveiled an aggressive, low-regulation strategy aimed at ensuring the United States stays ahead of China on AI. Among more than 90 proposals, Trump's plan calls for sweeping deregulation, with the administration promising to 'remove red tape and onerous regulation' that could hinder private sector AI development.


South China Morning Post
11 hours ago
- South China Morning Post
WAIC Shanghai: Tencent, SenseTime launch new AI models to stir up industry rivalry
Tencent Holdings and SenseTime launched new artificial intelligence (AI) models at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference (WAIC) in Shanghai on Sunday as Chinese Big Tech companies stepped up their rivalry in the field. Shenzhen-based social media and gaming powerhouse Tencent unveiled its Hunyuan 3D World Model 1.0, an open-source AI model capable of generating detailed three-dimensional environments, according to a statement. SenseTime, an AI pioneer in China, launched SenseNova V6.5, a new generation of its proprietary AI model series. Tencent said its latest Hunyuan model could create interactive, 360-degree virtual 3D scenes using natural language prompts or image inputs, thus significantly simplifying the production process for virtual reality experiences and video games. Tencent said Hunyuan was the industry's first open-source 3D world-generation AI fully compatible with 'CG pipelines' – the standard workflow used for creating 3D graphics and animations in film production, gaming and visual effects. An image generated by Tencent's Hunyuan3D World Model 1.0, unveiled at the World Artificial Intelligence Conference in Shanghai on July 27, 2025. Photo: Handout Meanwhile, SenseTime claimed SenseNova V6.5 had outperformed some of its US peers such as Google's Gemini 2.5 Pro and Anthropic's Claude 4-Sonnet. Its unveiling marked the Hong Kong-listed firm's latest efforts to double down on multimodal AI models, chairman and CEO Xu Li said at the WAIC venue. The introduction followed months after it launched the previous version called SenseNova V6, a multimodal model released in April that had outperformed OpenAI's GPT-4o across several metrics.