Apple Tests 3-D Face Scanning To Unlock Next iPhone: Bloomberg (bloomberg.com) 74
Five years ago, Apple made fingerprint scanners on smartphones popular. Now the company may have found a better technology to replace it. According to Mark Gurman of Bloomberg, the Cupertino-based company is exploring 3D facial detection as a replacement for Touch ID fingerprint authentication. From the article: This is powered by a new 3-D sensor, added the people, who asked not to be identified discussing technology that's still in development. The company is also testing eye scanning to augment the system, one of the people said. The sensor's speed and accuracy are focal points of the feature. It can scan a user's face and unlock the iPhone within a few hundred milliseconds, the person said. It is designed to work even if the device is laying flat on a table, rather than just close up to the face. The feature is still being tested and may not appear with the new device. However, the intent is for it to replace the Touch ID fingerprint scanner, according to the person.
Sure (Score:1)
So... yeah... fuck Apple. Again. Phone should be a phone, not everything else but a good phone.
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FFS -- NO! (Score:1)
So to unlock your phone in the middle of the night, you need to shine a bright light in your face and get your picture taken?
Fingerprints made sense, you use your finger to tap the home button. Having to lift up the phone to your face to unlock IS NOT user friendly and sounds like a complete pain in the ass.
Apple is just daring us to tell them to go fuck themselves. And it's about time we did
Tim Cook needs to be dragged the fuck out of there -- he's forcing change for change sake to try to hide the fact he
Why would it need light? (Score:1)
So to unlock your phone in the middle of the night, you need to shine a bright light in your face and get your picture taken?
Why would you assume a dedicated 3D sensor would need visible light? Or more than the screen light that they already use as a selfie flash?
Even the quality of AC's has diminished on Slashdot these days, and that's saying something!
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Because presently, the phone ILLUMINATES when held upright facing the user
Which means it would illuminate the face just as my second point said - HERP A DERP DA FURB.
Or perhaps you'd forgotten about that in your rush to bash on me you jerk.
I'm not being a jerk, just brutally honest to people who are stupid and cannot think. Such people are better for it in the long run, they need something to jolt them out of their literal stupor. The good news is you can recover from being stupid! Try to do so.
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You're damn right! A few years ago I only needed two Slashdot AC's but these days I need five or even six on the very hot days to keep my house at 21C.
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Never heard of IR?
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What does Iridium have to do with it?
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Assuming Apple catches up to where Microsoft was two years ago, no. My Surface has an IR LED coupled with an Intel RealSense 3D camera to power its biometric authentication. Quick and accurate, even with variance in facial hair and eyewear.
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this is NOT the reason to hate this idea....
you HATE this idea because all ANYONE (cops, crooks, exes, whatever) needs to do to unlock your phone is get it close to your face -- with or without your enthusiastic cooperation or awareness.
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Dont worry the user will have upgraded and live in a totally network home.
With the new version, just lifting the hardware up will quickly turn the lights on in the same room so the unlock will be a normal daylight experience.
A small number of reports of all lights in a house been activated every call are been looked into.
just a test (Score:2)
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Obligatory Space Quest III reference [groovypost.com].
Cannot change authentication credentials (Score:3)
Apple is raising the bar, but the problem with biometric authentication is always the same: once someone has made a 3D copy of your face, you cannot revoke your authentication credentials. You cannot change your face. Not easily at least.
And someone will make a 3D copy of a face that defeats this feature, and you will find a tutorial on the Internet explaining how to do it to average Joe.
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Apple is raising the bar, but the problem with biometric authentication is always the same: once someone has made a 3D copy of your face, you cannot revoke your authentication credentials.
One of the reasons I'm against the idea of fingerprint-based biometric authentication is because I think it'll lead to criminals either forcibly using, or even removing, the user's fingers. I don't want to think about them removing faces ... messy.
Or perhaps the phone won't recognise you after the criminal has beaten you senseless and broken your nose.
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Apple is raising the bar
Apple is raising the bar... by using an authentication that's been in other devices (including even Windows and Windows Phone!) for years?
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Uh, no one's done 3D facial scanning for authentication. Windows Phone and Windows itself (Windows Hello) use an IR camera purely because IR works better in more lighting conditions than RGB cameras do. (The image captured by IR cameras is more consistently lit even as you go from a bright room to darkness, whereas using a regular RGB camera will result in having to take
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Uh, no one's done 3D facial scanning for authentication. Windows Phone and Windows itself (Windows Hello) use an IR camera purely because IR works better in more lighting conditions than RGB cameras do.
I see. Thanks for the clarification.
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Uh, no one's done 3D facial scanning for authentication
Are you sure about that?
https://www.groovypost.com/unplugged/can-you-trick-windows-hello-with-a-photo/
Windows Hello-supported devices use two cameras to create a 3D image of your face.
https://software.intel.com/en-us/articles/how-to-get-working-windows-hello-on-actual-windows-10-insider-preview
One of the cool new features announced for the upcoming WIndows* 10 is Windows* Hello [...] The recognition is done using two type of camera in cooperation; the first is a classical HD camera and the second is a depth camera (infrared) for 3D an temperature scanning.
http://www.pcworld.com/article/2937701/why-most-of-us-will-miss-out-on-windows-hello-windows-10s-facial-recognition-feature.html
But the technology depends on “depth cameras,” which use infrared light to peer through makeup and beards to identify users. It’s these cameras, primarily made by Intel, that analysts and some PC makers believe will be too expensive to build into the sort of cheap PCs (with cheap webcams) that consumers prefer.
http://www.dell.com/support/article/us/en/19/SLN298266/windows-10-hello-facial-recognition-feature---supported-systems-and-requirements?lang=EN
The Windows 10 Hello Facial Recognition feature requires an Intel RealSense or 3D Camera to support facial unlock features. This is not available on all Windows 10 tested systems and the current list is detailed below.
It's true that one page in the Microsoft docs say that they use IR to account for differences in ambient lighting, and make no mention of the presence of absence of 3d scanning:
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-... [microsoft.com]
But then other docs give the impression that Windows provides two API frameworks, "Companion Device Framework" and "biometric":
https://docs.microsoft.com/en-... [microsoft.com]
So maybe it's just down to the device driver whether it uses 2d or 3d scanning to power Windows Hello, as suggested in
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In about eight years ago [thingiverse.com].
Not all bad (Score:2)
It's the encryption backdoor. (Score:5, Insightful)
Just more insidious. Use your face to lock your phone. Get arrested by police. Police just hold your phone up to your face, no password needed.
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Please no (Score:2)
It's bad enough that in the winter I have to take a glove off to unlock the phone and use it. Now I'll have to take whatever I have keeping my face/ears warm off to unlock the phone and then my glove off to use it. Of course I'll still be use my 5s whenever this comes out because I refuse to pay full price for phones that have reduced feature sets. For example the SE doesn't have all of the touch screen features of the existing models when it was introduced. Apple just didn't want to sacrifice sales of thei
any choice in the matter? (Score:5, Insightful)
I suppose you could make distorted faces at them to prevent it from happening... until you get tired.
This seems like *less* control over your device.
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Can't they just move your finger onto the phone - especially as you mention when you fall asleep, which is something I never thought about? It seems like it has only a slight improvement over facial recognition.
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And how exactly... (Score:2)
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However, the intent is for it to replace the Touch ID fingerprint scanner, according to the person.
(emphasis mine.)
It does sound like they are going to get rid of the Touch ID. Maybe, maybe not. But "replace" is usually taken to mean they intend to get rid of whatever is already in place.
Beards or weight change? (Score:1)
3D printed mask? (Score:2)
Big upside (Score:4, Funny)
At least the police will have to leave your face alone to be able to unlock your phone ;)
Crappy idea, but.... (Score:1)
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It'd be extra effort, but could they secure it further by allowing a combination of biometrics in a specific order to unlock it, possibly further combined with a passcode?
They could potentially do this with just touch ID, where you need to use specific fingers in a specific order.
Of course this would all defeat the rapid convenience of touch/face ID as the only unlock method, which means Apple is unlikely to implement it, but maybe they could have a "fast unlock" timer where once you had used the more compl
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I canâ(TM)t see myself using this (Score:2)
I love Touch ID. I use it all the time. I have a 15+ character passcode, and the only reason that is convenient is because of Touch ID. But a system that a) canâ(TM)t work in the dark and b) works in the light even without your consent isnâ(TM)t more convenient OR secure. I have no idea why Iâ(TM)d want this.
That said, this is all conjecture. Hopefully the real products this year keep Touch ID or something similar. I wonâ(TM)t stop using iOS products, but this isnâ(TM)t anything I c
Re:I can't see myself using this (Score:2)