New PalmID technology enables unlocking with the palm of your hand

October 30, 2017 14:48

A San Francisco company called Redrock Biometrics has been working on a security tool that uses the palm of a user's hand.

Công cụ bảo mật sử dụng lòng bàn tay của người dùng
Security tool using the user's palm.

According to Android Authority, advanced biometric security technologies used on smartphones today such as Samsung's iris scanning or Apple's 3D facial recognition (FaceID) are gaining a lot of attention and are gradually becoming a trend. However, the limitation of these methods is that the device requires special hardware to support that technology.

Recently, Redrock Biometrics, a San Francisco startup, has developed a security tool based on the user's palm called PalmID. This technology uses the palm as a secure key to authenticate to a series of online and offline services.

PalmID can be thought of as a scaled-up version of fingerprint sensor technology that uses the rich structure of the hand, said company president Lenny Kontsevich. It can also be recognized by a regular camera.

The company claims its authentication technology is more secure and practical than any facial recognition method. PalmID can use palm images captured by any camera with a resolution of 0.3 MP or higher and can authenticate very quickly, depending on the CPU speed.

According to TechCrunch, the technology converts palm images into a signature that Redrock claims is unique and unforgeable. Almost any device with a camera can use PalmID, including smartphones, ATMs, desktop computers, and AR/VR devices.

PalmID can also log in quickly on many mobile platforms such as Windows, Linux, Android and iOS. According to Redrock, palm recognition is not hindered by scars, stains, or insufficient light to take a photo. Just hold your hand in front of the camera at a distance of 6 inches or more, the device will authenticate the login, verify identity when making payments, and do banking.

Don't worry about someone seeing your palm and copying it unless you take a picture of your palm and post it on your profile for everyone to see (which you probably wouldn't do, right?).

According to Khoahoc.tv

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