Several people wondered this, and the only statement from someone at Google I could find was in this tweet from Tim Bray: "Nope. Give us some credit". A terse statement that does not explain much, but isn't brevity Twitter's USP?
Image sourced from hereGoogle says this is "a completely new approach to securing a device, making it even more personal". While it may make your device more personal, I do not see how does this make it more secure. Or how can it ever be more secure than the traditional password or pattern-drawing mechanisms, unless used in combination with one of these.
Unless, Ice Cream Sandwich does an iris scan while registering the user's face, which may need precise positioning of the eyes and may not instantly unlock your phone.
I shudder at the thought of someone using my photo/video to unlock my unattended phone and access/misuse data from my always-logged-in Google account or impersonate me on Facebook and Twitter. Think about Google's own Wallet.
This feature will be interesting to see.
ReplyDeleteHaha! Nice catch, that would be one serious security flaw.
ReplyDelete