Activist Headquarters
Related: About this forumWhy You Should Stop Using Face ID Right Now
https://www.pcmag.com/explainers/why-you-should-stop-using-face-id-right-nowBiometric locks like face recognition are easy to set upbut thanks to a legal loophole, they're easier for law enforcement to bypass than a passcode.
So are biometric scans a safe way to lock down your devices? After all, face and fingerprint scans can be used against you, while passwords and passcodes cannot. Lets talk about why you may want to stop using biometrics to unlock your phone, sooner rather than later.
Repeat:
After all, face and fingerprint scans can be used against you, while passwords and passcodes cannot.
Be safe!
CousinIT
(12,366 posts)By law, you do not have to tell law enforcement the passcode.
Before leaving for any political activity, esp protests, I put the phone in airplane mode. No connectivity. And turn off location use for everything. EDIT: And last time, I set the phone so alerts, calls, or codes wouldn't show up on the home screen. But I can still take photos. Then turn it all back on when I'm back home.
Next time I'll be wearing sunglasses and a bandana around my face, too.
It doesn't cover everything and isn't perfect (many leave their phones at home, which is the safest option), but it's some of what I do.
eppur_se_muova
(41,327 posts)Criminals have already come up with their own answers to this question.
This was much discussed in fiction in previous decades. Remember "Thunderball" (1961 novel, 1965 movie) in which a pilot of a nuclear bomber "donates" his eyeball -- and thus retina -- to one of the bad guys ? I'm pretty sure stolen fingertips are already a "thing".
Remember Condoleezza Rice's infamous "No one could have imagined ..." statement after 9/11 ? No one could imagine terrorists crashing airliners into buildings, despite a few novels, a TV-movie, and considerable public discussion about very similar possibilities. Failure of imagination seems to be surprisingly widespread among those responsible for security in one theatre or another -- or perhaps overconfidence is just an authoritarian trait.
Before tech companies introduce new security "features", they need to query a few Death Row inmates about how they would deal with their proposals. The people introducing the technology have potential-profit-induced tunnel vision and a lack of imagination -- at least of the type needed.
usonian
(24,149 posts)Dabney Coleman (spoiler alert) creates an alibi with a photo of his face intentionally seen in a stoplight camera.
Colombo, being Italian, notices that the light and shadows in this artwork dont match the actual lighting.
Probably lots more examples.
Funny how the crooks are always one step ahead.
eppur_se_muova
(41,327 posts)(Eye transplants do not involve re-attaching the optic nerve, so this pilot was flying half-blind, BTW. Eye banks make use of the front part of the eye, not the retina, AFAIK.)
usonian
(24,149 posts)
And this:
Toddler Repeatedly Enters Wrong Password, Locks Dads iPad Until 2067
https://www.thedad.com/toddler-repeatedly-enters-wrong-password-locks-dads-ipad-until-2067/

