Sensory leverages voice, facial biometrics in TrulySecure 2.0 on-device authentication solution
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Sensory leverages voice, facial biometrics in TrulySecure 2.0 on-device authentication solution
Silicon Valley-based Sensory last week announced the availability of TrulySecure 2.0, a multimodal biometric authentication technology that leverages both voice and facial biometrics technologies to ensure secure access to application on mobile Android devices.
Sensory has built its reputation in the speech-recognition arena, but TrulySecure 2.0—available via the AppLock by Sensory application for Android mobile devices—also utilizes facial-recognition and deep-learning-neural-network technologies to improve security and accuracy, according to Sensory CEO Todd Mozer.
“Over the past year, we’ve substantially improved both our speaker-verification and our vision technology, and TrulySecure 2.0 is the result of that, which we think is really is the best of all worlds,” Mozer said during an interview with IWCE’s Urgent Communications. “It’s got a whole lot of convenience. It’s really fast at identifying the right user.
“You can use face, or you can use voice. Or, you can set it up in a mode to require face and voice, and that’s what we call the TrulySecure mode, because that’s the mode where we can get one in a million false accepts. So, it’s a very, very accurate solution, yet it’s still quite convenient and flexible.”
Other biometric approaches exist for user verification, but many of the most-discussed technologies—fingerprint and retinal scans—require additional hardware that often is not embedded in a mobile device or require connectivity to a cloud-computing environment, Mozer said. In contrast, Sensory’s TrulySecure 2.0 technology in embedded on the device—no cloud connection is needed—and utilizes microphones and cameras that are virtually ubiquitous on modern mobile devices, he said.
“We got into vision about two years ago, and we had the strategy of combining vision and voice together to offer a really secure biometric authentication that was not only secure but really convenient,” Mozer said.
“We saw a real opportunity, because everyone kept telling us that they were frustrated with fingerprint—the manufacturers didn’t want to pay so much for fingerprint readers, and the end users got frustrated, because they kept getting locked out of the fingerprint things. In the era where people are trying to make things smaller and smaller, having a dedicated sensor for a fingerprint made no sense to us. We really wanted to use the microphone and camera that were built into mobile phones.”
Criminals would be
Criminals would be pleased.
Whether face, iris, fingerprint, typing, gesture, heartbeat or brainwave, biometric authentication could be a candidate for displacing the password if/when (only if/when) it has stopped depending on a password to be registered in case of false rejection while keeping the near-zero false acceptance.
Threats that can be thwarted by biometric products operated together with fallback/backup passwords can be thwarted more securely by passwords alone. We could be certain that biometrics would help for better security only when it is operated together with another factor by AND/Conjunction (we need to go through both of the two), not when operated with another factor by OR/Disjunction (we need only to go through either one of the two) as in the cases of Touch ID and many other biometric products on the market that require a backup/fallback password, which only increase the convenience by bringing down the security.
In short, biometric solutions could be recommended to the people who want convenience but should not be recommended to those who need security.