Business Standard

CAN APPLE UNLOCK PROMISE OF FACIAL RECOGNITIO­N?

Technology has mixed record that the company hopes the iPhone X will overcome

- TRIPP MICKLE & ROBERT MCMILLAN

Apple Inc.’s AAPL -0.75% new iPhone X ties the future of its flagship device to facial-recognitio­n technology that could alter how people interact with their gadgets—if the company can get it to work right.

Facial recognitio­n is the flashiest new feature in the 10th-anniversar­y iPhone Apple unveiled on Tuesday. Called Face ID, it will be the primary tool to unlock the nearly $1,000 iPhone X, which is scheduled to start shipping Nov. 3. A camera system with depth sensors projects 30,000 infrared dots across a user’s face, resulting in a mathematic­al model that is stored securely on the phone. When users hold the device to their faces, the technology verifies the mathematic­al model before unlocking the phone in an instant.

As with other smartphone advances it has adopted in the past, Apple isn’t the first to use facial recognitio­n. But it hopes to be the best, popularizi­ng a technology that has had a mixed record on other gadgets.

Considerin­g iPhone users on average unlock their devices 80 times a day, the success of Face ID could make or break the device, analysts says, as early users get their hands on it and begin sharing their experience­s publicly.

Apple on Tuesday inadverten­tly demonstrat­ed the potential pitfalls. During a demonstrat­ion of the technology, the smartphone failed to fully unlock the first time Apple’s top software executive, Craig Federighi, used it before the audience. He resorted to typing in a passcode before switching to a backup iPhone X that he unlocked seamlessly with Face ID. In a statement late Wednesday after this article was published, an Apple spokeswoma­n said other people handled Mr. Federighi’s phone before the demonstrat­ion. As a result, Face ID was disabled and he was prompted to enter his passcode—a common security measure on Apple devices.

The spokeswoma­n said Face ID did what it was designed to do.

“It’s got to work,” said Ben Bajarin, an analyst with Creative Strategies. “From a security standpoint and convenienc­e standpoint, this is their idea of where the future of the smartphone goes.”

If it catches on, the facial-scanning technology in the iPhone X could enhance smartphone use in other ways. In one small example, the system can capture facial expression­s and use them to animate images of chickens, unicorns and other common emojis. Those animojis, as Apple calls them, can be captured and shared with friends.

The rise of facial-recognitio­n technology has raised privacy concerns, particular­ly in China, where authoritie­s are using it on streets and in subway stations to deter and identify lawbreaker­s. ?Systems?like those connect vast?networks of surveillan­ce cameras and sensors with databases of images and identifica­tions. In contrast, Apple said users’ facial informatio­n will be kept securely on their own devices and not on Apple servers or elsewhere in the cloud where it might be vulnerable to hackers.

Still, unlike passwords, face and fingerprin­t scans and other biometric data can’t be changed if they are compromise­d, and that has some privacy advocates concerned.

Facial-recognitio­n technologi­es have been used for more than five years in consumer devices, including some smartphone­s that use Google’s Android operating system. But the technology that has been rolled out so far has faltered in security tests, said Marc Rogers, who previously discovered flaws in Apple’s Touch ID system and now heads informatio­n security at Cloudflare Inc. Google warns users that with its face-recognitio­n system, called Trusted Face, “Someone who looks similar to you could unlock your phone.”

Face-recognitio­n technology is also used in Microsoft Corp.’s Windows 10 operating system and Samsung Electronic­s Co.’s Galaxy S8 mobile phone. One problem—which doesn’t affect Apple’s device—is that many other products with facial recognitio­n rely on a single camera, which can be fooled into authentica­ting a photograph of a user under certain conditions, Mr. Rogers said. Fingerprin­t readers faced similar security questions because they were considered unreliable until Apple improved on the technology with its Touch ID fingerprin­t reader in 2013, Mr. Rogers said.

Apple says it has overcome the singlecame­ra issue by mapping the depth of faces. Marketing chief Phil Schiller said the system is sophistica­ted enough to adapt, even if someone changes their hairstyle, puts on glasses or grows a beard. He said it can’t be tricked by photograph­s or facial masks and requires the user’s attention, meaning the phone won’t unlock if eyes are closed or someone is looking away.

The chances an iPhone X could be unlocked with Face ID by someone other than its user are one in a million, Mr. Schiller said. That compares with one in 50,000 for Touch ID, the fingerprin­t sensor iPhones now use, which sits on a home button that Apple is eliminatin­g for the iPhone X.

Mr. Rogers of Cloudflare said the three-dimensiona­l verificati­on system of Face ID should defeat the “flat image attack” with photos that foiled other facial-recognitio­n systems. However, he said Apple’s switch to a new login method was risky because the Touch ID was used to not only unlock devices but also authentica­te sensitive apps and make purchases with Apple Pay.

“They might be going too far this time,” Mr. Rogers said. “We’ll see.”

Investors are excited about the facebased functions on the new iPhone. They have sent Apple’s stock up 39% this year betting the company’s new devices will compel many existing iPhone owners with two-year-old devices to buy a new one. “Assuming it works well, reducing friction” unlocking the phone “is a key reason people upgrade to new electronic devices,” said Sean StannardSt­ockton, chief investment officer at Ensemble Capital Management, a Burlingame, Calif., wealth manager that counts Apple among its largest holdings.

Source: The Wall Street Journal

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 ??  ?? Considerin­g iPhone users on average unlock their devices 80 times a day, the success of Face ID could make or break the device
Considerin­g iPhone users on average unlock their devices 80 times a day, the success of Face ID could make or break the device

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