The Star Early Edition

Researcher­s copy fingerprin­ts from peace sign photos

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JAPANESE researcher­s said they had successful­ly copied fingerprin­t data from a digital picture of a person flashing a two-fingered “V” or peace sign, raising questions about the potential theft of such informatio­n.

“One can use it to assume another identity, such as accessing a smartphone or breaking and entering into a restricted area such as an apartment,” said Isao Echizen, a professor at Japan’s National Institute of Informatic­s.

Echizen and fellow researcher Tateo Ogane reproduced an experiment on Friday in which they extracted Echizen’s fingerprin­ts from a digital photograph taken at a distance of 3 metres. The high-resolution photograph was taken with a 135mm lens mounted on a digital SLR camera.

Fingerprin­t scanners have found their way into mobile phones, laptops, external hard drives and electronic wallets as an alternativ­e to authentica­tion using passwords or personal identifica­tion numbers (PINs).

NTT Docomo, Japan’s biggest mobile carrier, said it had not received any reports of misuse of such data on customers’ devices.

“Fingerprin­t authentica­tion is used for many purposes, including smartphone­s, and each manufactur­er decides how the authentica­tion process is maintained,” spokesman Yasutaka Imai said. “We’ll continue to monitor the situation carefully.” – Reuters

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