SO david are you saying that the apple face ID can’t be fooled?

I’d say that give it till xmas and someone will have done it.
As for the finger print sensor
The apple one can be fooled now with other body parts
Biometric scanning is still rather new so it’s really a wait and see,


From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] 
On Behalf Of David Chittenden
Sent: Wednesday, 13 September 2017 6:20 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: I’m worried that FaceID is going to suck—and here’s why

The Samsung face recognition can be tricked with a picture of the person's 
face. In fact, there are YouTube videos showing people taking selfies with one 
phone and then using the selfie picture onscreen to unlock the Samsung face 
recognition. That is nicely secure, don't you think?

As for the fingerprint sensor, I have read several complaints from people that 
they often touch the camera rather than the fingerprint sensor.

Kind regards,

David Chittenden, MSc, MRCAA
Email: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Mobile: +61 488 988 936
Sent from my iPhone

On 13/09/2017, at 14:02, Simon Fogarty 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:
Interesting,

Samsung have a full screen no buttons face recognition and a finger print 
sensor.

Why can’t apple do that also.
From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Mary Otten
Sent: Wednesday, 13 September 2017 3:40 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: I’m worried that FaceID is going to suck—and here’s why


I’m worried that FaceID is going to suck—and here’s why
Ars Technica  /  Ron Amadeo

<~WRD000.jpg>
Enlarge<https://cdn.arstechnica.net/wp-content/uploads/2017/09/10-1.jpg> / This 
right here. This gesture. Doing this 80 times a day sucks.

The all-new iPhone 
X<https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2017/09/apples-radically-different-smartphone-is-called-the-iphone-x/>
 is out, and it's packed with technology. But one thing it's not packed with is 
a fingerprint sensor. Like many phones in 2017, the iPhone X goes for a nearly 
all-screen design, which means there's no more room for a front Touch ID 
sensor. Rather than locate a fingerprint sensor on the back, like many phones 
have done, Apple chose to do away with Touch ID entirely. Instead, the X is 
relying only on the new "Face ID" facial recognition feature for biometric 
security.
Face ID on the iPhone X uses a "TrueDepth" camera setup, which blasts your face 
with more than 30,000 infrared dots and scans your face in 3D. Apple says this 
can "recognize you in an instant" and log you into your phone.

None of that matters. Face ID is still going to suck.

This is not the first phone we've tried with a facial recognition feature, and 
they all have the same problem. It doesn't matter how fast or accurate Face ID 
is, the problem is the ergonomics: you need to aim it at your face. This is 
slow and awkward, especially when compared to a fingerprint reader, which 
doesn't have to be aimed at anything.

Consider the "taking it out of your pocket" use case: If you're good, you'll 
stick your hand in your pocket and grip the phone so your finger lands on the 
fingerprint reader. Touch ID works as both an "on" button and an 
"authentication" button. In one touch, you've turned on the phone and logged 
in. You haven't even fully taken the phone out of your pocket yet, and it's 
already on and unlocked. By the time you bring the phone to your face, the 
unlock process is finished and you're looking at the home screen.

To use the iPhone X's Face ID, you have take the phone out of your pocket, lift 
it up to your face, swipe up to turn it on, and only then can can you start the 
unlock process. The difference is probably one or two seconds, but for 
something you do 80 times a 
day<https://techpinions.com/apples-penchant-for-consumer-security/45122>, 
having the fastest possible unlock system really matters.
<~WRD000.jpg>
Hardware involved in Apple's True Depth Camera system.
<~WRD000.jpg>
Example of how Face ID maps and learns your face.
<~WRD000.jpg>
Demo of Face ID setup.
<~WRD000.jpg>
Animojis, which move to mimic your facial expressions.
<~WRD000.jpg>
3D mask produced with facial recognition on the iPhone X.
<~WRD000.jpg>
Face ID recognition along with a tap of the side button can authenticate Apple 
Pay.

Consider authenticating with Apple Pay. With a fingerprint reader, you can slam 
your iPhone on the credit card terminal while holding your finger on the Touch 
ID button, and everything will just work. You're continuously authenticating 
and beaming credit card data at the same time, which is easy, intuitive, and 
hard to mess up. According to Craig Federighi's Face ID demo during the 
keynote, you now have to open up Apple Pay first, then aim the phone at your 
face so Face ID can work. Only then can you tap against the credit card 
terminal. That's two extra steps.

A fingerprint sensor, because it works by touch, is basically active all the 
time. Anytime you need it, you just press it, and it will work. Facial 
recognition has to be specifically started by an app though. So to authenticate 
a payment, you now have to open Apple Pay first, because something has to tell 
the facial recognition system to turn on. If you ignore this and just put the 
phone against a credit card terminal without authenticating, I suspect Apple 
Pay will open and ask for a Face ID scan, which won't work because the phone 
won't be aimed at your face.

There's also the "on a table" use case: where before you could just press the 
home button to unlock the phone, now you'll need to pick it up and, again, aim 
it at your face.
We've kind of already experienced this with the Galaxy 
S8<https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2017/04/samsung-galaxy-s8-review-shiny-new-hardware-meets-old-software-habits/>
 (and Note 
8<https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2017/08/hands-on-with-the-galaxy-note8-havent-we-seen-this-before/>).
 On that phone, Samsung didn't do away with the fingerprint sensor entirely, 
but it has such an awkward size and 
location<https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2017/04/samsung-galaxy-s8-review-shiny-new-hardware-meets-old-software-habits/3/#h1>
 that the S8 might as well have not had a fingerprint sensor at all. The phone 
design asks users to rely on its Iris or face recognition for biometrics, and 
it's just so slow. The "Let me take a selfie" pose that you have to make every 
time you unlock the phone is slow, tiring, and annoying. It requires a pause 
and a level of precision that just isn't needed with a fingerprint reader.

I will admit I have not tried Face ID yet, but it's hard to imagine a facial 
recognition system that solves the problem of having to carefully aim a phone 
at your face. We won't get a chance to try many of these scenarios until we get 
some extended time with the phone, but it would take some serious magic to 
solve them.

With a nearly $1000 price tag, Apple is billing the iPhone X as its 
super-high-end, no-compromise phone, but the lack of a fingerprint sensor is 
going to be a big downside. Sure, there's no room on the front anymore, but 
plenty of phones have an easy and ergonomic rear fingerprint reader, and it's 
something Apple could have done while it waits for that mythical under-screen 
fingerprint 
technology<https://arstechnica.com/gadgets/2017/06/qualcomm-vivo-show-off-slow-but-convenient-under-display-fingerprint-sensor/>
 to work.

Facial recognition is just not a good idea for a device that doesn't always 
need to be aimed directly at your face. I can't imagine Face ID won't feel like 
a big step backwards compared to Touch ID. If my experience with the Galaxy S8 
is anything to go by, I suspect a lot of users will just opt to type in a PIN.


Original Article: https://arstechnica.com/?p=1164837


Sent from my iPhone
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