Can iPhone's Face ID Be Fooled By a Mask?
![Associated Press reporter Anick Jesdanun demonstrates Face ID, Apple's name for its facial-recognition technology, on an iPhone X, in New York.](https://cdn.nextgov.com/media/img/cd/2017/11/14/111417faceidNG/860x394.jpg?1627498396)
Associated Press reporter Anick Jesdanun demonstrates Face ID, Apple's name for its facial-recognition technology, on an iPhone X, in New York. Mark Lennihan/AP
Hackers may have found a way through 3D printing.
Face ID might not be as secure as Apple has stated.
A security firm from Vietnam claims they've found a way to trick the Face ID security feature on iPhone X.
The firm, BKAV, created a mask to bypass the facial recognition system. This isn't your typical halloween mask, however. Researchers at BKAV used a 3D printed-frame, including a handmade silicon nose and mouth as well as cut-outs for eyes. The mask costs only $150 to make, though they also made several other masks that did not crack Face ID, so the process isn't that easy.
Apple has repeatedly reassured customers that the multi-sensor Face ID system is very secure and cannot be fooled by something like a mask. The company claims that the chance of spoofing it is 1 in a million. But perhaps the researchers at BKAV have beaten those odds.
To learn more, check out the video below from CNET: