Once thieves broke into houses to
steal your possessions, now it’s probably easier to steal your smartphone on
the street. As everyone is carrying around a mobile ‘jewellery’, then the value
of authentication and protection from theft is becoming a hot subject.
Nearly half of all robberies in San
Francisco last year involved a smartphone, up from 36% the previous year. In
other US cities the same high profile exists with Washington recording 42% of
robberies and New York 14%. It is now claimed that a third of all US citizens
own a tablet and the ownership of smartphones is very much higher. In the UK, the Office for National Statistics reported that 107,000 incidents of 'theft form the person' were recorded last year, an 8% rise from previous year.
Do you ‘lock’ your smartphone or is
it like the majority open to use once stolen?
This week Apple, as part of their iOS7
announcement, a new iOS feature, they call ‘Activation Lock.’ The feature effectively
disables the iPhone even if a thief has turned it off or erased the data on the
phone. This remote ‘kill switch’ renders the stolen phone useless and difficult
to sell in the black market. The phone can be reactivated only after the user
logs into it with the right Apple ID and password.
Google also are taking the issue forward and have filed
a patent suggesting users stick out their tongue or wrinkle their
nose in place of a password. Yes they envisage we will happily look at our
phone and pull a face to be recognised and authenticated. They suggest that specific
gestures could prevent the existing Face Unlock facility being fooled by
photos.
The patent, filed last year, suggests
the software could track a "facial landmark" to confirm a user not
only looks like the device's owner but also pulls the right expression and this
could be; a frown, an open smile, a forehead wrinkle, eyebrow movement, or a tongue
protrusion. They go on to cover a number of ways that they could further ensure
the phone is not being fooled.
The patent suggests users would have to type in a password if they
failed to make the right gestures
Now just imagine you are on a crowed train and you need to
unlock your phone, or you are having an intimate dinner in a restaurant and the
phone vibrates and you are asked to start to pull faces at the camera. Yes we
see it working well at those gurning meetings and the late comedian Les Dawson
would be able to give a masterclass in the art, but really there must be simpler
ways to validate who you are?
As the smartphone and tablets become our mobile office,
personal library and hold more than just contacts and diaries and even our email
we must protect them from theft. It is not just a case of replacing them when
they are lost or stolen, but maybe thinking about the identity and information that
you have effectively lost. This may be more valuable to you and the thief that
the smartphone or tablet.
1 comment:
It'd help if makers of smart phone and tablet cases would add a way to attach a lanyard that'd tie those devices more firmly to us.
They don't need to be absolutely theft-proof. All they need do is make for another trouble, the thief picks on someone else.
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