The Borneo Post

Samsung admits Galaxy S10 fingerprin­t access flaw

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SEOUL: Tech giant Samsung Electronic­s yesterday acknowledg­ed a major flaw with its fingerprin­t system that allows other people to open its top-end smartphone­s, advising users to delete all registered prints.

Samsung is the flagship subsidiary of the giant Samsung Group and crucial to South Korea’s economic health. The conglomera­te is by far the biggest of the family-controlled empires that dominate business in the world’s 11th-largest economy.

But it has a history of humiliatin­g setbacks with major products, most notably a worldwide recall of its Galaxy Note 7 devices in 2016 over exploding batteries, which hammered its reputation.

Earlier this year it had to delay the launch of its first foldable smartphone, the Galaxy Fold, a er pre-release users found faulty screens.

Samsung’s latest problem emerged a er a user in the UK told the Sun newspaper earlier this week her Galaxy S10 smartphone could be unlocked by someone else simply by puting on a screen protector and applying an unregister­ed fingerprin­t.

The flaw meant anyone who got hold of her phone could transfer funds using her financial apps, the user told the British paper.

In a statement released yesterday, Samsung said the issue involved “fingerprin­t sensors unlocking devices a er recognisin­g three-dimensiona­l pa erns appearing on certain silicone screen protecting cases as users’ fingerprin­ts.”

The firm advised users of the Galaxy Note10, 10+ and Galaxy S10, S10+, and S10 5G to ‘ delete all previous fingerprin­ts’ and register their data anew.

“Please refrain from applying a silicone screen protecting case to your device until a so ware update, which is planned to be released beginning next week,” it added.

The statement was released a day a er Samsung said it would soon roll out a fix, but did not specify what the problem was.

It has touted the Galaxy S10’s in-display fingerprin­t sensor as ‘revolution­ary’.

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