New Straits Times

SMILE, YOUR IPHONE X IS UNLOCKING

Apple claims FaceID’s ‘neural engine’ cannot be tricked by photo or hacker

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APPLE will let you unlock the iPhone X with your face — a move likely to bring facial recognitio­n to the masses, along with concerns over how the technology may be used for nefarious purposes.

Apple’s newest device, set to go on sale on Friday, is designed to be unlocked with a facial scan with a number of privacy safeguards — as the data will only be stored on the phone and not in any databases.

Unlocking one’s phone with a face scan might offer added convenienc­e and security for iPhone users, said Apple, which claimed its “neural engine” for FaceID could not be tricked by a photo or hacker.

While other devices have offered facial recognitio­n, Apple is the first to pack the technology allowing for a three-dimensiona­l scan into a hand-held phone.

But despite Apple’s safeguards, privacy activists feared the widespread use of facial recognitio­n would “normalise” the technology and open the door to broader use by law enforcemen­t, marketers or others of a largely unregulate­d tool.

“Apple has done a number of things well for privacy, but it’s not always going to be about the iPhone X,” said Jay Stanley, a policy analyst with the American Civil Liberties Union.

“There are real reasons to worry that facial recognitio­n will work its way into our culture and become a surveillan­ce technology that is abused.”

A study last year by Georgetown University researcher­s found nearly half of all Americans in a law enforcemen­t database that includes facial recognitio­n, without their consent.

Civil liberties groups had sued over the FBI’s use of its “next generation” biometric database, which included facial profiles, claiming it had a high error rate and the potential for tracking innocent people.

“We don’t want police officers having a watch list embedded in their body cameras scanning faces on the sidewalk,” said Stanley.

Clare Garvie — the Georgetown University Law School associate who led last year’s study on facial recognitio­n databases — agreed that Apple was taking a responsibl­e approach but others might not.

“My concern is that the public is going to become inured or complacent about this.

“Widespread use of facial recognitio­n could make our lives more trackable by advertiser­s, by law enforcemen­t and may be someday by individual­s,” she said.

Garvie said her research found significan­t errors in law enforcemen­t facial recognitio­n databases, opening up the possibilit­y someone could be wrongly identified as a criminal suspect.

Another worry, she said, was that police could track individual­s who have committed no crime simply for participat­ing in demonstrat­ions.

Shanghai and other Chinese cities have recently started deploying facial recognitio­n to catch those who flout the rules of the road, including jaywalkers.

Facial recognitio­n and related technologi­es can also be used by retail stores to identify potential shoplifter­s, and by casinos to pinpoint undesirabl­e gamblers.

It can even be used to deliver personalis­ed marketing messages — and could have some other potentiall­y unnerving applicatio­ns.

 ?? BLOOMBERG PIC ?? Apple Inc’s new iPhone X will be launched this week with the FaceID feature. Privacy activists fear the widespread use of facial recognitio­n will ‘normalise’ the technology and open the door to broader use of a largely unregulate­d tool.
BLOOMBERG PIC Apple Inc’s new iPhone X will be launched this week with the FaceID feature. Privacy activists fear the widespread use of facial recognitio­n will ‘normalise’ the technology and open the door to broader use of a largely unregulate­d tool.

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