Toronto Star

Apple’s next iPhone could unlock with 3D face scanning

Company said to be testing improved security system

- MARK GURMAN BLOOMBERG

SAN FRANCISCO— Apple Inc. is working on a feature that will let you unlock your iPhone using your face instead of a fingerprin­t.

For its redesigned iPhone, set to go on sale later this year, Apple is testing a security system that allows users to log in, authentica­te payments and launch secure apps by scanning their face, according to people familiar with the product. This is powered by a 3D sensor, added the people, who asked not to be identified as they are discussing technology still in developmen­t. The company is also testing eye scanning, one of the people said.

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. An Apple spokespers­on declined to comment.

In testing, the face unlock feature takes in more data points than a fingerprin­t scan, making it more secure than the Touch ID system, the person said. Apple introduced Touch ID in 2013 with the iPhone 5s for unlocking, and added support for authentica­ting payments and logging into apps a year later.

Apple is not the first to use different forms of biometric authentica­tion. In its latest phones, Samsung included iris scanners that let users unlock their phones and make payments by scanning their eyes.

Samsung’s feature on its Galaxy S8 smartphone launched to poor reviews as users were able to trick the sensor with printed photo copies of a person’s eyes. Apple’s sensor has 3D depth perception, which means the system is less likely to be duped by 2D pictures. Analysts at JPMorgan Chase & Co. and other firms said earlier this year that a 3D sensor would likely be included in the next iPhone.

The new iPhone’s debut this fall will mark the biggest upgrade in years to the company’s most important product. Apple launched the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus last fall, focusing on camera and speed upgrades while using the same design as the previous iPhone 6s (which essentiall­y added a pressure-sensitive screen to the 2014 iPhone 6 design). The iPhone generates nearly two-thirds of Apple’s sales, and has become a central hub for products such as the Apple Watch, Apple TV and the new HomePod.

In addition to the face unlock feature, Apple is testing next-genera- tion iPhone prototypes that include a dedicated chip for processing artificial intelligen­ce tasks and screens that can display content at a higher frame rate. The AI chip is internally called the Apple Neural Engine and would improve battery life by handling tasks like image recognitio­n and typing suggestion­s, Bloomberg News reported in May. The faster screens in testing are the same as the ProMotion displays in Apple’s latest iPad tablets, one of the people said.

Apple’s sensor has 3D depth perception, which means the system is less likely to be duped by 2D pictures

For the device’s 10th anniversar­y, Apple is also testing a new glass casing, steel edges and a larger display that fits into a smaller overall body, Bloomberg News reported in April. The new phone will have glass on both the front and back that curves at the edges. Between the glass front and back is a stainless steel frame that houses power and volume controls, according to the report.

The front glass and back glass looks continuous because of how thin the steel surroundin­g frame is, people familiar with the device said. The edge-to-edge display’s only break will be a cut-out in the glass to fit in the earpiece, front facing camera and facial recognitio­n sensor, one of the people said.

The redesigned iPhone will use an OLED screen, which reproduces colours more crisply, while the company is also planning updates to the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus that still include standard LCD screens. The new 3D sensor is being tested for the OLED version. All three phones will include faster, more efficient processors based on a 10-nanometre production process, people familiar with the products said. The non-OLED phones will be more readily available than the revamped phone at launch because of supply constraint­s, Bloomberg News has reported.

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