Asian Guy’s Passport Rejected Because His Eyes Are Closed

By Sughra Hafeez in Bizarre On 9th December 2016
advertisement

#1

Look at this picture of 22-year-old Richard Lee. Do his eyes look open to you?

#2

Of course they do! But not according to New Zealand's online passport checker

advertisement

#3

Richard Lee was trying to renew his passport so he could return to Australia from New Zealand after Christmas on Monday but received an awkward error message when he submitted his picture to Internal Affairs's online passport photo checker.

The automated system told the 22-year-old DJ, who is currently studying Aerospace Engineering and Business Management in Melbourne, that his eyes were closed, despite them being quite obviously open.

'The photo you want to upload does not meet our criteria because subjects eyes are closed,' the message read.

#4

Mr. Lee, who was born in Taiwan but grew up in New Zealand, contacted the Department of Internal Affairs shortly after to ask why his photo was not accepted.

A spokesperson told him 'uneven lighting on the face' caused it to be rejected.

'I tried different ones and no luck, so I rang the office they said it's to do with the shadow in my eyes and uneven lighting in the face,' Mr. Lee told Daily Mail Australia.

'So I got a few new ones taken at Australian Post and one of them went through, finally.

But his friends had already posted an image of the bungle to Facebook and social media users started suggesting the machine was 'racist'.

advertisement

#5

one user wrote:

'Technology is getting racist,'

advertisement

#6

Another posted:

'Dude, his eyes are clearly open.'

advertisement

#7

Several others claimed they had experienced the same problems when using facial recognition technology.

Mr. Lee said he was not bothered by the incident and did not believe it was a race issue.ok

'The error message didn't bother me that much, I saw the humor in it and obviously it's a programming error in the recognition software,' Mr. Lee said.

'Just a bit annoying with the delay and I'd expect to get a staff reply after 3 failed submissions,' he added.

advertisement

#8

The DJ uploaded a humorous image to Facebook shortly after the error message was posted using a Snapchat filter that widens the subject's eyes.

Maybe he would have had more luck if he looked like this.

advertisement

#9

The Mr. Lee said the response he received online after the image was posted was 'unexpected' but welcomed.

'I posted it initially because I found it hilarious not necessarily racist. But it was really heartwarming to see so many of my friends in New Zealand and Australia jumping in and saying something, which is what makes us such great countries to call home.'

He said a lot of social media users of Asian decent were able to see the humor in the situation but reminded others it can be difficult if you are not confident with your origin.

'Some people get offended way too easily because they're not as confident with their origins... At the end of the day we're all different and of course, there are certain situations where you have to stick up and some situations it's just a good laugh.'

advertisement

#10

The system helpfully provided examples of what Richard should actually look like

advertisement

#11

Fortunately, the engineering student found the funny side, and his passport was renewed after a later photograph was accepted