Amazon Wants To Replace Passwords With Selfies and Videos (thestack.com) 125
An anonymous reader writes: Amazon has filed a patent application for a technology which would allow consumers to authenticate transactions via selfie or video. As part of the verification process, the computer or mobile device will prompt the user to 'perform certain actions, motions or gestures, such as to smile, blink, or tilt his or her head.' Amazon claims that the introduction of facial recognition technology will make transactions more user friendly and secure than conventional identification methods, such as passwords which can be stolen and hacked.
Laugh (Score:1)
As if Amazon isn't bad enough, now it's just downright creepy.
Re:Laugh (Score:5, Funny)
'perform certain actions, motions or gestures, such as to smile, blink, or tilt his or her head.'
As if Amazon isn't bad enough, now it's just downright creepy.'
Creepy isn't quite the word that comes to mind, more like pervy.
Just what "certain actions, motions or gestures" we talkin' 'bout here? Just wanna know if I'm gonna have to clean up afterward...
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Please choose again. Suggestion: middle finger up with the pinkie of your left hand inside your right ear."
You just tried it to see if your pinkie would reach, didn't you?
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Well-endowed girls everywhere will be complaining, "Why does Amazon always want me to jump up and down?!?"
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Amazon says, "give us a twirl, love."
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Only if I can use a picture of my actual asshole.
Your friend or significant other could also use a picture of his or her 'actual asshole' - and then Amazon would have an image of your face anyway!
Can we stick with passwords? (Score:4, Insightful)
I'm not too optimistic about systems like this. Sure, passwords can be stolen, but if you're careful they can be kept secret, and they can be changed if need be. But my face? If someone gets their hands on a suitable picture or video of me (really not hard to get a photo or video of the average person) and can use that, I'm shit outta luck. And on the other hand, I'm also concerned that an automated system could decide that I don't look like me; the state of my beard at the time or whatever throwing it off.
So in short, interesting idea, but probably not all that practical.
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And then there's fingerprints. Nothing like a "password" that gets printed onto almost anything you touch!
Re:Can we stick with passwords? (Score:4, Funny)
...But my face? If someone gets their hands on a suitable picture or video of me (really not hard to get a photo or video of the average person) and can use that, I'm shit outta luck. ...
A Niqb could be a solution, at least for women: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]
Re:Can we stick with passwords? (Score:4, Interesting)
Exactly this. We keep telling everyone not to share their passwords. What's one of the big things people love sharing? Photos of themselves! When you make someone's face their password, you've just turned every selfie they've ever sent into a shared password. How long would it take to compile those "password shares" into something that could fool Amazon's system?
I recently tried an app MSQRD which maps someone else's face onto yours. It works surprisingly well: changing your face into a gorilla or Tony Stark or Barack Obama. You can move your mouth, tilt your head, etc and it keeps working. Now imagine if someone were to make something like that but using all those selfies that someone posted and using the result to fool Amazon's app into thinking that's what you really looked like.
Passwords have their flaws, but those can be mitigated by additional layers of security (e.g. two factor authentication). Facial recognition is one of those things that sounds good in theory, but falls apart on closer observation.
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Daybreak (formerly SOE) had technology in EQ2 and EQ:Next where it would map your facial expressions onto your character's. Called SOEMote, it fell right into the bottom of the uncanny valley, but was an interesting thing to play with.
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Using faces for passwords is as ridiculous as using fingerprints for passwords. Biometrics should only be used for usernames, passwords should be something you know, not something that you are.
This is the most sense I've ever heard talked regarding biometrics.
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While I see a host of problems, this isn't a face. This is a video stream of your live face combined with an arbitrary suggested action.
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Identical twins? (Score:2)
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My own sister used to have trouble detecting difference between my brother and I and we are not twins. Not so much now that we have very different hair and facial hair styles but friends we haven't seen in a long time sometimes still mistake us for each other.
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My GF's sister could probably pass for her if she let her hair grow and colored it. As it is, when she was around people who know my GF, everyone knew she was R's sister before anyone said anything.
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Back in the 90s and even as recent as 2005 my brother and I had the the same hair style and the same style clothes and I would frequently have his friends or co-workers walk up and just start talking. I would and say something like you must know my brother and they would look at me funny and then notice the more subtle stuff like a wedding ring. That didn't actually convince one girl she thought he was a lying cheating bastard until I pointed out that I also have a tattoo and he doesn't.
Multiyear Prime subscriber here... (Score:4, Insightful)
Allegedly for help with the troublesome task of entering passwords from a mobile device, this co-opting of the device's camera function is a bit too Orwellian.
And if I get to where I can't use a mobile phone keyboard, I will use a tablet or just wait till I get my ass home.
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Their ancillary information bot is like a digital bloodhound, but a flaw in a code remnant (left, I like to believe) by a sympathetic coder will allow my negative/negative/expletive negative preamble to be recorded as three lost Prime memberships during collation efforts.
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What webmasters should do is quit looking at their own website only and implement SSO. OAuth2 or whatever. Some sites already have it, and it works.
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"a bit too Orwellian"
I don't think that you know what "Orwellian" means...
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Even given how annoying most phones make it to enter non-alphanumeric characters, I can't help but think that I can still enter 8-12 random characters faster than finding a well-lit spot and performing a variety of selfie poses on command ("Sit... Beg... Play dead... Fat-girl pose... Roll over... Good human, here's your account!").
Dear Amazon - I
Reverse Engineering Social Engineering (Score:3)
How the Fuck Does it Make it Easier (Score:2, Insightful)
"The entry of these passwords on portable devices is not user friendly in many cases, as the small touchscreen or keyboard elements can be difficult to accurately select, "
You mean to say things are not easy to do on mobile device??? About fucking time someone said this. OF COURSE IT'S NOT EASIER...it never was - never stopped you from pushing people to do all things mobile.
Again, it's about the mobile device not the computer. Never had a fucking problem ordering via a computer. Fuck Off
Jeff Bezos says (Score:2)
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"If you want to buy something put a shoe on your head!"
Hold it... Hold it... Now, bark like a dog!
This could be fun!
Trust companies to secure Biometrics? (Score:2)
'Secure' in the same way a 4 digit pin is.... (Score:2)
Ah the joys of 'security'.
I'm waiting until we finally get the 'If a 4 digit pin is secure enough for your bank, why not for us too?'. We don't need this kind of thing and we are going about it all wrong. Security shouldn't be easy, it should be hidden. Hell, if Amazon are good enough to predict what I'm going to buy, surely they know something is wrong them moment I start buying loads of something unexpected, and then try and ship it to somewhere I don't even live?
Nothing is wrong with a good password, and
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I believe they already do something like this. If you are making a purchase that Amazon deems suspect (mainly, in my experience, due to shipping orders to someplace new), you need to enter in your full credit card information again and not just use the stored card number. It can be annoying sometimes when it happens, but I still like the feature. I'd rather be annoyed every so often than log on one day to find out that "I" maxed out my credit card buying electronics and having them sent to some address I
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I go back and delete my method of payment from accounts like that since I don't order on line constantly, new egg maybe once a year, amazon maybe 3 or 4 times, walmart a couple times. Get into my the account for my gas, water, trash, power bill on the other hand....
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Allowing a company to store your credit card details is already a very bad idea. It's convenient though. But security and convenience do not coexist peacefully.
"passwords which can be stolen and hacked" (Score:2)
That being said, I don't mind the finger print scanner on the iPhone and Nexus phones, because they're kept entirely local and the whole system locks down if the biometric data could be compromised. But what Amazon is proposing is that I send my biometric data across https every single time I want to log in to watch some Prime
Security (Score:5, Insightful)
The 3 factors are
Something you know : Password
Something you have : Key
Something you are : Biometrics
also known as ...
Something you forgot
Something you lost
Something you cease to be
That is an awesome summary (Score:2)
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Banks add a other element. Bank debit card, plus PIN, plus promise to reimburse you if you can it wasn't you who took out the money. That is, it's cheaper for them to reimburse than to implement better security.
DPA/TPA (Score:2)
Uh, less secure than passwords (Score:3)
Shopping spree time (Score:2)
... via facial recognition from google image search.
Assuming the server side biometric data doesn't ever get compromised, how the fuck are they going to detect on the - very hackable - client device that the photo or video is live and not downloaded off facebook or youtube?
Seriously, who is the idiot who approved spending money on this patent? Any Amazon shareholder cares to sue him for wasting the company's money?
This is not new/prior art (Score:2)
Similar Software was utilized as a Windows 98 add-on. To log in, you had to sit in front of the computer and facial recognition software acted as the password manager.
On a 180 MHz overclocked Compaq desktop, just to let you know how old this 'selfie for a password' idea truly is.
Screw that noise (Score:1)
Alternate universe (Score:2)
What about my evil twin?
Will shaving off the goatee be enough?
Good thing computers can't do that? (Score:2)
The problem with this (Score:2)
This has two problems:
1) At some point the face is reduced to a set of numbers. Those numbers can be stolen and reproduced just the same as a password.
2) The other way to hack this is at gunpoint.
Just think of the possibilities (Score:2)
If people become used to this, the candid camera sketches would be unending.
"For verification of identity, please now introduce your pencil in your left nostril".
Flawed (Score:4, Insightful)
Face recognition is all fine and well till you grow a beard, or have a stroke.
Why is it always replace? (Score:2)
I'm all for better ways to authenticate. Fingerprint, selfies, gestures, code generators...
But why must it always be framed as getting rid of passwords. Why not in addition to? As the old saying goes, good authentication involves 3 things.
Something you know (password)
Something you have (token generator)
Something you are (fingerprint, selfie)
They can play with these in terms of convenience and security, but I hope we never get rid of passwords. Maybe Amazon can use selfies for low value transactions, and the
This explains ... (Score:2)
Tits (Score:2)
Amazon: Your password for today, is a picture of your tits.
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Is it April 1 already? (Score:2)
Not all devices have cameras
What the (Score:2)
'perform certain actions, motions or gestures, such as to smile, blink, or tilt his or her head.'
No way a video of that could ever be faked!
It would be totally impossible to capture or intercept the video of a legit transaction and then play it back, that could just never, ever happen!
And with the advanced video tools on the market, it would also be utterly impossible to take some innocuous pre-existing video and modify it. Anyone who's ever uploaded more than a few seconds of video of themselves to Youtube doing anything is now at risk of being spoofed.
Seriously, it's like Amazon is searching for nove
4chan /b/ Verification method: (Score:2)
This sounds exactly what 4chan users on /b/ have been using for identifying if OP is really delivering.
"Shoe on head."
"Sharpie in pooper."
--
BMO
as someone with Parkinsons, how about... (Score:2)
You know (Score:1)
They better make them optional (Score:1)
I am not going to use biometrics to authenticate shit
You can only get your biometrics stolen ONCE, after that big effing luck changing your eye signature or your fingerprints
You have littered the whole internet with your facebook and instagram pictures in a while variety of pictures
Media ppl specially, there are thousands of hours of high resolution video of your face in a wide variety of poses, you are soooooooo screwed
Lazy ppl unwilling to remember passwords are going to be the end of us
Just send them rfi
a plan ... (Score:2)
Doing things is easy (Score:2)
Getting a BOT to do things upon command is easy. There is going to be a limited number of things that can/will be asked for, these can be pre filmed/rendered in advance. If they do come up with a new required antic - then you don't get to login; is that a problem? Breaking 10% of accounts mechanically still gets you into lots of accounts.
10 years ago The Subservient Chicken [subservientchicken.com] was doing this. It was bought by Burger King .... now all that remains is an inane video.
So, now I can use a picture to steal credentials? (Score:2)
It might require a little bit of sophistication to create the software that would make an image respond to the requested gesture, but this would pave the way for credentials to be stolen (permanently) by just taking a picture of a person.
Somehow I don't think this is a good idea.
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As an evil twin, I'm very much in favor of this. On the downside, I'll have to shave my goatee...
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...and obtaining a database of such models for various users becomes further motivation to compromise webcams. Way to go Amazon, keeping the cracker economy vibrant.
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And what happens if your face in damaged in accident, or you have a stroke, or you die? How do you/your caregivers/the executor of your will, etc get access to information on your phone/computer if it is well protected? Heck, how do you call 911 in an emergency, if your phone decides that you aren't an authorized user? I suspect that digital secrecy and easily accessible encryption may introduce a plethora of problems that no one is paying much attention to.
"Siri. There's a manic with an axe breaking do
Re:Photo in front of the camera (Score:4, Insightful)
You can dial 911 from the lock screen.
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Re:Photo in front of the camera (Score:5, Funny)
> How do you/your caregivers/the executor of your will, etc get access
"Hold your dear departed father up straight! Ok, now tilt his head to the left. No! HIS left!"
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> How do you/your caregivers/the executor of your will, etc get access
"Hold your dear departed father up straight! Ok, now tilt his head to the left. No! HIS left!"
Yes. Those guys would have had so much more fun with access to Bernie's [wikipedia.org] Amazon account.
Re:Photo in front of the camera (Score:4, Insightful)
And what happens if your face in damaged in accident, or you have a stroke, or you die?
Then, if it was really important, you would have hopefully already set up a way for someone you trust to get your password (which, contrary to the headline, is not being "replaced" in the most literal sense) and then they can get access to your stuff.
I can't help feeling your doom-mongering is a bit like saying, "They want us to start cars with keys? What if I lose my keys?!" We seem to have managed okay with such a system so far.
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Except that it's more like replacing a secure mechanism with a less secure one that's more convenient. The problem they're trying to solve is to make it easier to get a low level of security for people who think passwords are too confusing.
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"Siri. There's a manic with an axe breaking down my door. Call the police."
Did you miss the news story just within the last couple days about how terrible voice assistants are at stuff like that?
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