Wednesday, December 31, 2025
ADVT 
Interesting

China's Notorious Toilet Paper Thieves Strike Again

IANS, 18 Apr, 2017 01:22 PM
    China's notorious toilet paper thieves have struck again, stripping an urban public park in Chengdu city of 1,500 rolls in just one week, forcing authorities to consider installing facial recognition machines to beat the penny-pinching toilet paper bandits. 
     
    As part of efforts in the nationwide "toilet revolution" campaign, management at the People's Park in Chengdu, the thriving capital of China's Sichuan province, began providing free toilet paper in all its restrooms from April 8. However, authorities found that the first batch of 1,500 rolls of toilet paper were gone in just seven days, the Chengdu Business Daily reported yesterday.
     
    An official told the newspaper that an investigation found that 30 restrooms were emptied of toilet paper in just one hour.
     
    The toilet paper thieves may cost the park up to 100,000 yuan (or approximately $14,528) a year, Feng Huiling, the official in charge of the People's Park, said, adding that some tourists have even been caught dismantling toilets' pedal flush handles to "sell them for money."
     
    If the problem persists, they may follow the example of Beijing's Tiantan Park and install machines with face scanners to regulate use, state-run Global Times today quoted the official as saying.
     
    Tiantan Park, home to the Temple of Heaven in Beijing, introduced six high-tech dispensers that dole out toilet paper only after conducting a facial scan. The pilot programme kicked off recently after authorities faced an increasing number of local residents raiding the public park's restrooms for toilet paper.
     
    Visitors now must allow the machine to scan their faces before it dispenses about 60-centimetres of toilet paper. The software will will not dispense additional toilet paper within nine minutes of a person's first scan.
     
    Tiantan Park claims a total of 30 rolls of paper were used in just one toilet on one day last winter, the majority of which were stolen, the Beijing Evening News reported in March.
     
    "Sometimes we have to replenish the toilet paper every 20 minutes," a park attendant was quoted as saying.

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Direct brain-to-brain connection between humans established

    Direct brain-to-brain connection between humans established
    Researchers have successfully replicated a direct brain-to-brain connection between multiple pairs of people as part of a scientific study on direct...

    Direct brain-to-brain connection between humans established

    Bogus emails lure people into sharing personal information

    Bogus emails lure people into sharing personal information
    More internet users are being lured into revealing personal information as they log into bogus emails, says a new study....

    Bogus emails lure people into sharing personal information

    Ancient DNA reveals Europeans had sex with Neanderthals

    Ancient DNA reveals Europeans had sex with Neanderthals
     According to a study, there is a surprising genetic unity between the earliest known Europeans and contemporary Europeans....

    Ancient DNA reveals Europeans had sex with Neanderthals

    How to invest for public good and returns

    How to invest for public good and returns
    A leading US think tank has launched a new report to encourage impact investing or enabling private investment for public good and financial returns with...

    How to invest for public good and returns

    Long-lost secrets of extinct Dodo revealed

    Long-lost secrets of extinct Dodo revealed
    A new laser 3D scan of the extinct flightless bird dodo has exposed portions of its anatomy previously unknown to science, revealing secrets about....

    Long-lost secrets of extinct Dodo revealed

    Observation: Key To Learning Dance Better

    Observation: Key To Learning Dance Better
    The best way to master dancing is to imbibe the art of observing the sequences demonstrated by the instructor and not merely listening to spoken...

    Observation: Key To Learning Dance Better