Antelope Valley Press

Amazon introduces palm recognitio­n tech

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SEATTLE (AP) — Amazon has introduced new palm recognitio­n technology in a pair of Seattle stores and sees a broader potential audience in stadiums, offices and other gated or secured locations.

Customers at the stores near Amazon’s campus in Washington can flash a palm for entry into secured areas and buy goods.

The company chose palm recognitio­n, according to Dilip Kumar, vice president of Physical Retail & Technology, because it’s more private than other biometric technology, and a person would be required to purposeful­ly flash a palm at the Amazon One device to engage.

“And it’s contactles­s, which we think customers will appreciate, especially in current times,” Kumar wrote in a blog post Tuesday.

Like the human fingerprin­t, every palm is unique. Unlike fingerprin­ts, the palm is not used for broader identifica­tion purposes because more body specific informatio­n is needed. Any palm image proffered for use is never stored on the Amazon One device, the company said, for security reasons.

The data is encrypted in a secured sector of the cloud that was custom built by Amazon, and customers can also delete their Amazon One-related data permanentl­y at any time.

The company expects to roll out Amazon One as an option in other Amazon stores in the coming months, which could mean Whole Foods Market grocery stores. But Amazon believes the technology is applicable in a myriad of secured locations.

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