April 28, 2015 By Douglas Bonderud 2 min read

Passwords are passe; fingerprints are falling out of fashion. Enter Bodyprint, a new effort from Yahoo’s Research Labs, which looks to transform users into walking, talking, smartphone-using passwords. Anything from ears to knuckles to the barest edge of fingertips can be used to unlock mobile devices. Biometrics are taking the security world by storm, with patent applications for biometric technologies up from 46 just 10 years ago to 567 last year. Is Yahoo’s new offering the first wave of the future?

The Ears Have It

As reported by The Hacker News, this new biometric technology is looking to toss out fingerprints and traditional passwords in favor of a system that supports users’ natural habits. Have an incoming call? Bodyprint uses an ear impression to grant access. Want to encrypt sensitive documents? It’s possible to use knuckles, a set of five fingers around screen edges or the palm of a hand.

What’s more, it doesn’t require any extra technology, relying on a smartphone’s own capacitive touch screen rather than specialized fingerprint sensors. Because displays have lower resolution, bigger images are necessary for authentication, which is part of the reason scanned body parts must be much larger than fingerprints.

In its first public foray at the 2015 Computer Human Interaction conference in Seoul, South Korea, the application correctly identified bodyprints and their owners 99.98 percent of the time, but the Yahoo team has plans for more testing and algorithm improvement before it takes the product mainstream.

Private and Public

The evolution of biometric technologies raises a number of ethical questions concerning mandatory use and government oversight, but as noted by David Cowan of Bessemer Venture Partners, there is also a problem with theft.

“Once your fingerprint is stolen, it’s stolen forever, and you’re stuck,” he said.

The same goes for the shape of an ear, knuckle dimples or any other user characteristic. Fingerprint scanners are regularly duped by fake prints days after they debut in app stores. Does the rise of large-scale biometrics point to the emergence of a market where ear scans and palm prints are exchanged for big money?

Meanwhile, CBR predicts biometrics will be inextricably linked to the Internet of Things. This is already happening due to wearable fitness monitors and the development of a “human sat nav” at the University of Hanover, which helps direct users with the help of tiny electrical jolts. Bodyprint and similar initiatives offer a way to gate this type of access in a way that’s intuitive but still secure, and without the ability to “forget” or “lose” necessary access keys.

It’s no surprise nonfingerprint alternatives for smartphone security are cropping up, and so far, the technology looks promising. However, long-term success depends on both overall software accuracy and the readiness of users to embrace this type of person-to-password revolution.

Image Source: iStock

More from

What we can learn from the best collegiate cyber defenders

3 min read - This year marked the 19th season of the National Collegiate Cyber Defense Competition (NCCDC). For those unfamiliar, CCDC is a competition that puts student teams in charge of managing IT for a fictitious company as the network is undergoing a fundamental transformation. This year the challenge involved a common scenario: a merger. Ten finalist teams were tasked with managing IT infrastructure during this migrational period and, as an added bonus, the networks were simultaneously attacked by a group of red…

A spotlight on Akira ransomware from X-Force Incident Response and Threat Intelligence

7 min read - This article was made possible thanks to contributions from Aaron Gdanski.IBM X-Force Incident Response and Threat Intelligence teams have investigated several Akira ransomware attacks since this threat actor group emerged in March 2023. This blog will share X-Force’s unique perspective on Akira gained while observing the threat actors behind this ransomware, including commands used to deploy the ransomware, active exploitation of CVE-2023-20269 and analysis of the ransomware binary.The Akira ransomware group has gained notoriety in the current cybersecurity landscape, underscored…

New proposed federal data privacy law suggests big changes

3 min read - After years of work and unsuccessful attempts at legislation, a draft of a federal data privacy law was recently released. The United States House Committee on Energy and Commerce released the American Privacy Rights Act on April 7, 2024. Several issues stood in the way of passing legislation in the past, such as whether states could issue tougher rules and if individuals could sue companies for privacy violations. With the American Privacy Rights Act of 2024, the U.S. government established…

Topic updates

Get email updates and stay ahead of the latest threats to the security landscape, thought leadership and research.
Subscribe today