Amazon just filed a patent for tech that would allow shoppers to make a purchase by taking a photo of themselves. Facial
recognition authentication is a lot safer than current authentication
methods. That is why banks and other institutions want to use it to
authenticate users.
"In the face of ever increasing amounts of
fraud, and huge caches of stolen usernames and passwords, organizations
are looking to turn users into their own passwords," says Damien Hugoo
of Easy Solutions, a
fraud protection service provider. "Biometric authentication methods,
whether it's touch, voice, or facial recognition, combine frictionless
access with a high level of accuracy to strike the right balance between
convenience and security."
Customers rely on their unique
physical features to protect their accounts and safeguard transactions.
There's also an 'ease-of-use' factor for customers. No more trying to
make out a fuzzy set of numbers in a CAPTCHA block.
With facial
recognition, technology measures and records various points on a human
face. The user just takes a selfie on their mobile device in order to
authenticate access to any channel. This technology is already being
adopted by financial institutions, as well as other verticals becoming
increasingly concerned about the validity of users logging on to their
sites.
So what is to prevent fraudsters from using a photo from
social media? The proposed Amazon system will ask users to do something
specific, such as blink or wink, actions "that cannot be replicated with
a two-dimensional image," the patent says.
The patent mentions other types of electronic devices aside from
phones and tablets, including personal data assistants. It's likely an
Alexa-compatible device will one day have a camera, making the next gen
Echo or home robot the perfect shopping machine. If robots are actually going to destroy civilization, that's probably how it will happen.
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