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We’re excited about Face ID, but is the iPhone X’s best feature a potential disaster in the making?

- written by GARY MARSHALL

Face ID: friend or foe for the Apple fan?

The iPhone X has a feature no other device has: Face ID. This is Apple’s replacemen­t for Touch ID, and it uses facial recognitio­n to identify you not just for unlocking your phone, but authorisin­g Apple Pay, too. Apple clearly thinks it’s the future, but not everybody is so enthusiast­ic.

There are three key worries about Face ID. One, some people fear that it just won’t work as well as in Apple’s slick videos; two, that it will enable other people to unlock your phone without permission; and three, that it’s a potential privacy nightmare.

Let’s consider reliabilit­y first. As anybody who doesn’t have an American accent knows from using Siri, Apple’s innovation­s aren’t always as reliable in real life as they are in tech demos. And that’s a concern because Face ID isn’t just a cute feature for animating emoji: it’s the gateway to in-app purchasing and real-world shopping via Apple Pay, so if it doesn’t work it’ll embarrass us in public. That’s never a good look. Some critics question how representa­tive the billion images Apple scanned for Face ID actually are. Webcam firms have been caught out with this in the past – HP famously released cameras that couldn’t cope with dark skin – and in the run-up to the iPhone X’s on-sale date many people expressed concerns about whether Face ID might favour particular ethnicitie­s over others. Some wondered where Apple got its billion photos from in the first place.

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