Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Hotel accommodation - Can the public security bureau check face recognition when opening a room?

Can the public security bureau check face recognition when opening a room?

Face recognition can be found in the public security bureau.

Hotel registration information belongs to personal privacy, and public security organs cannot check it at will. If it is necessary to investigate certain facts in handling a case, it can be inquired according to law after being approved by the leaders, and the inquiry records shall be kept.

There are several documents that can be used to check into a hotel:

1. China citizens living in China are resident identity cards or temporary resident identity cards;

2. China citizens under the age of 16 living in China are household registration books;

3, China People's Liberation Army soldiers, military identity documents;

4. Identity documents of China People's Armed Police and Armed Police;

5, Hong Kong and Macao residents, for Hong Kong and Macao residents to and from the mainland pass;

6. Taiwan Province residents hold mainland travel permit for taiwan residents or other valid travel documents;

7. Foreign citizens are passports.

The hotel room reservation process is as follows:

1. After choosing a suitable hotel, the guest can make a reservation by telephone, online order or fax, and quote the guest's name, room type and check-in date;

2. After receiving your reservation information, the hotel will confirm it within one hour;

3. After receiving the confirmation from the hotel, the guest only needs to report the guest's name at the front desk of the hotel;

4. You need to bring an adult ID card when you check in, and you need to pay a certain deposit.

Article 1032 of the Civil Code of People's Republic of China (PRC) stipulates that natural persons have the right to privacy. No organization or individual may infringe upon the privacy rights of others by spying, harassing, exposing or making public. Privacy is the private space, private activities and private information that natural people live in peace and don't want to be known by others. Article 103 Unless otherwise provided by law or expressly agreed by the obligee, no organization or individual may commit the following acts:

(a) by telephone, SMS, instant messaging tools, e-mail, leaflets, etc. Disturb the private life of others;

(2) Entering, taking photos or peeping into other people's private spaces such as houses and hotel rooms;

(3) Shooting, peeping, eavesdropping or revealing other people's private activities;

(4) Shooting or peeping at the private parts of others' bodies;

(5) handling other people's private information;

(6) Infringe upon the privacy of others in other ways.