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why your next phone will include fingerprint, facial, and voice recognition

by:KJTDQ     2020-04-30
In some ways, it is a miracle that even half of consumers pay for heart-locked phones.
You will think that the benefits of doing so are obvious: by entering a few numbers, you can get basic protection from prying eyes.
But according to a recent study, 44% of users say even this is too much trouble.
To make matters worse, 30% of people don\'t even worry about mobile security at all.
From 0000 to 9999, there are 10,000 possible combinations of numbers, but in 3 samples.
With 4 million passwords and more than 10%, some people think \"1234\" is their best choice.
Consumers have been asking for better ways, more convenient and less time for years --consuming.
It turns out that they may have an answer all the time, not even knowing --
Their body parts can be used as their next password.
Biometric Recognition proves who you are by utilizing the unique features of your body, which may be the key to a more effective system.
In fact, it is almost certain that in the next few years, each new phone will have three biometric options as standard features: a fingerprint scanner built into the screen, face recognition driven by high
Clarity camera and speech recognition based on a large number of vocal samples.
For many in the industry, this is not an accident, but an inevitable.
We store a lot of the most private personal information on our phones.
Today\'s businesses are already struggling with the policy of bringing equipment from home, which will only become more difficult.
A Symantec study highlights the depth of the problem --
All different types of companies around the world see enterprise mobile device security as one of their biggest challenges.
The PIN code is better than nothing, but in a world where mobile phone theft now constitutes a major part of urban crime, losing devices means that the company is secretly missing, the PIN code is far from enough.
Since Apple acquired Authentec Inc. in last July, news has emerged as to whether Apple will include a fingerprint scanner in its next release.
In fact, Apple is one of the many players, whether they are adding biometric sensors to the 5S or waiting until six are basically irrelevant, over the years, the mobile industry has been moving in this direction.
Samsung\'s Galaxy Nexus phone already includes facial recognition (
They didn\'t do a good job though).
It turns out that accessories that can add fingerprint scanners to current phones are popular, and voice recognition is now available through many different services.
The reason for this is that the technology needed to make these changes is in place.
Facial and speech recognition are only software;
They can use the powerful cameras and microphones already in their phones.
With the adoption of better internal components for the next generation of devices, these systems will only become more robust and accurate.
Fingerprint scanners have also matured over the past few years, and at least one company has figured out how to embed sensors directly into the device screen.
These more complex login types also support new feature types --
CrucialTec has invented a system that can program scanning each finger to load a different application.
This switch will mark a major shift in the way we interact with our devices --
If the goal is security, of course, there are other measures that are less extreme and more measured.
But behind the language that requires a better password, there is a greater effort to build trust because the phone can be safely used for sensitive transactions.
In the future, our mobile phone can be used as a portal for health information, location data, government services, etc.
Using these devices as a platform, the entire new industry is being built.
Americans still lag behind citizens in other developed countries in how to use mobile phones.
But that means there\'s a bigger chance here.
If you can make users feel like James Bond when they touch the screen, they are more likely to believe that \"mobile wallet\" is a practical thing.
There are different questions about whether these technologies are ready for such a wide range of applications --
Scale deployment.
While everyone has their own strengths and weaknesses, together they offer considerable improvement to the status quo.
No system is a hacker.
Proof, but the use of several biometric technologies, not one or one password, may greatly help solve several of our biggest problems related to mobile security.
Whenever you keep sharing your personal information, potential privacy issues arise.
For this issue, however, the danger may not be as obvious as it initially looked --
After all, biometric identification will be the form of optional features.
There is no more direct privacy violation than the theft of a mobile phone, followed by the temporary loss of control over all social media, financial and personal accounts.
Whenever Apple or other Giants decide to fully adopt a biometric solution, the size and frequency of people using it will have a huge impact on our future identification.
When you scan the body multiple times a day to send text or tweets, it is difficult to see this process as an invasive, potentially dangerous impact.
In the Long March in which biometric technology enters every corner of our daily life, it may mark a turning point in which such certification suddenly becomes normal and familiar --
Forever change the way we interact with the system around us.
The article first appeared on Forbes.
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