To unlock the new iPhone X, users will have no choice but to use their own face. No home button or touch this phone to unlock it. The only option is the high-tech facial recognition system called Face ID, which is criticized by many people. An article from Business Insider is titled
"You'll need to use your face instead of fingerprints to unlock the new iPhone X."According to Forbes:Apple's chief vice president, Phil Schiller, said "
Face ID recognizes your face" and can be adapted to recognize changes in the user's appearance. Schiller said the TrueDepth Camera System on the iPhone X combines many hi-tech technologies - infrared camera, proximity sensors and environmental sensors, as well as a flood luminaire and Apple's own dedicated hardware - all face cards with 30,000 invisible vision points . This information feeds the nervous network of the iPhone X, which creates a mathematical model of the user's face.People have noted that Face Detection can easily be misused by curvy cops. All you have to do is keep it on a person's face to unlock it.What if someone is introverted or uncomfortable with observation? People already know that they cover their cameras and tape channels microphones to avoid recording. Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg believes it is necessary.People weary of the "war on money" and increased currency centralization are concerned about Face ID compatibility with Apple Pay.
According to Bank Innovation:As far as Apple Pay is concerned, FaceID will become payment authentication, with the person's own biometric information being used as a transaction check. It can also be used to access more sensitive user applications, including bank applications or others that track financial data.
The feature that Apple claims can not be misled by static imagery such as someone's face image (it will also not be tricked by someone wearing a mask or beard, etc.) works by mapping the face of the user by infrared light.
The pressure for more favorable monitoring and centralization of functions in technology seems to be the current agenda.In Australia, major media promote microchipping for people to perform tasks that can easily be performed without implanting radio-frequency devices in their bodies.