Fingerprint identification systems could sweep through the world of technology faster than most have predicted, according to an annual report released by Ericcsson, the world’s largest cellphone network maker – based on opinion polls of 100,000 smartphone users around the world.
Nearly three-quarters of those polled (74%) believe
biometric smartphones will become mainstream next year – and more than
half of those polled were interested in the idea of fingerprint ID
replacing passwords for card purchases online (50%), and in fingerprints
being used in place of all internet passwords (52%).
“People are accessing more and more services through the cloud, and
from a growing number of devices,” Ericssson said in the report.
“Although consumers love to have their content and information available
at all times, logging in to retrieve it is causing frustration. Sites
are demanding longerpasswords with a mixture of numbers, letters and
symbols, making them almost impossible to remember.”Ericsson’s poll for the biometrics pages consisted of 5,000 iPhone and Android users, all of whom used mobile internet services daily, in 10 major cities. It also found that consumers were comfortable with more exotic biometric technologies, such as smartphones which recognized users via their eyes. Nearly half (48%) of users were keen on this idea.
Ericsson said that “growing fatigue” consumers felt for passwords meant that, “Consumers would rather get rid of them completely, and for this reason are showing interest in biometric alternatives.”
Other handset makers will follow Apple’s lead in using fingerprint technology, according to a report by Reuters. Reuters quoted the CEO of Swedish biometrics firm Fingerpint Cards, who predicted that at least seven major smartphone firms, including Samsung, would release handsets incorporating the technlogy next year.
Stephen Cobb, Security Researcher with ESET said, when
Apple unveiled the fingerprint sensor in Apple’s iPhone 5S that the
device could be a “game changer” in a We Live Security report here.
Cobb said, “Successful implementation of biometrics in a
segment leading product could bode well for consumer acceptance. I have
been a fan of biometrics as an added authentication factor ever since I
first researched multi-factor and 2FA systems 20 years ago, however,
user adoption is very sensitive to performance; in other words the
iPhone 5S could advance biometrics, or put a whole lot of people off
biometrics.”
CNET
said in its report on Ericsson’s research that other handset makers
would offer “more seamless” ways to lock smartphones, driven in part for
the trend for workers using their own devices at work (Bring Your Own
Device, or BYOD), “Mobile makers are expected in the coming year to
include increasingly seamless ways of unlocking devices and securing
data — particularly as the bring-your-own-device (BYOD) trend continues
to grow even further.”
Several start-ups are investigating even more out-there methods of
biometric authentication, with some using user behavior as a metric, and
shipping in the form of apps. Further We Live Security reports on the
cutting edge of biometrics and passwords can be found here.
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