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China Security Input Devices The Almighty Buck Hardware Technology

China Unveils World's First Facial Recognition ATM 129

An anonymous reader links to an article at IB Times according to which: China has unveiled the world's first facial recognition ATM, which will not allow users to withdraw cash unless their face matches their IDs. The machine was created by Tsinghua University and Hangzhou-based technology company Tzekwan. It has a camera installed in it that captures the facial features of the user then compares it with a database of identification photos.
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China Unveils World's First Facial Recognition ATM

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  • Good luck running an errand for a friend. Do they not have debit cards and Pin Numbers in China?
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Take a life size image of the cardholders face and place it over your face while making a transaction.

      • by antiperimetaparalogo ( 4091871 ) on Sunday May 31, 2015 @04:49PM (#49810911)

        Take a life size image of the cardholders face and place it over your face while making a transaction.

        Or take his head...

        • Take a life size image of the cardholders face and place it over your face while making a transaction.

          Or take his head...

          That's silly, just bring his face.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Many people carry some kind of photo ID in their wallet. Scaled up they work well for unlocking phones with facial recognition.

        Having said that, these days you can probably just search Facebook for the person. Narrow it down by geographic area (since you know where you robbed them, and maybe where they live from their ID). Chances are you will get a reasonable photo.

    • I'm fairly sure that they have Personal Identification Number numbers in China because they love redundancies there just as much as you do.
    • Are you insane giving out your pin to you bank account is the most stupid thing I have ever heard
      • you can set up temporary pin numbers for just that reason with some banks. i can at my credit union
      • by Anonymous Coward

        Some people have friends they'll highly trust. Other people might even go so far as to trust their spouse with money!

      • You do know you can change your PIN afterwards and check the bank transaction log right?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Being an ugly American, I will say, "I'm pretty sure facial recognition won't work in China."

    • Of course - the face recognition is a second factor.

      This would not work on the Moddle East, though. You would just get a bunch of unauthorized withdrawals from the accounts of captives.

    • Good luck running an errand for a friend

      Yep, running an errand on behalf of the loansharks, right?

      Tough shit!!

    • Good luck running an errand for a friend.

      Uh, how often are you lending your debit card and PIN to any friend, or even family member? I mean seriously, can't think of a single time I've done this. Someone needs to run an errand, they get cash, or they have their own ATM card.

      Do they not have debit cards and Pin Numbers in China?

      Ah, yes, the infamous PIN...why didn't they think of that infallible impossible-to-break bulletproof security model..

  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday May 31, 2015 @04:20PM (#49810737)
    ERROR: All users match same data set.
    • This scheme will work for one branch in Lesser Nowhere, Sechwan Province, with a finite and small set of pictures, and a small number of crooks. Once the number of faces increases, the probability of a false positive explodes, roughly as (N 2) (select every two out of N), where N is the size of the pools of pictures + the person being scanned.

      The well-known example is the "birthday paradox", in which twenty-three people at a party increases the probability of two of them having the same birthday to fifty

      • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward

        This is a different problem, where your issue is a non issue. When you insert your credit card, the ATM gets your card number, cross references with your ID card and fetches validation photos from your ID photo database. Then it's just a matter of cross-validating the features of the face in the camera of the ATM against the photos in the database (for the ID associated with the credit card).

      • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Sunday May 31, 2015 @05:25PM (#49811079) Homepage

        Uh, no. You're not trying to find a needle in a haystack, the ATM is trying to determine if the one person in front of the camera matches the one identity on file. it doesn't matter if there's 300.000 people who look enough like you to pass the check as long as the thief is one of the other 300+ million. You're weeding out the 99.9% who look nothing like you.

      • This scheme will work for one branch in Lesser Nowhere, Sechwan Province, with a finite and small set of pictures, and a small number of crooks. Once the number of faces increases, the probability of a false positive explodes,

        Not at all. If someone puts Joe Smith's card into the reader, and types in Joe Smith's card PIN, then they only need to compare the face of the person with a picture of Joe Smith, and nobody else. A crook can only get your money if by a huge coincidence that crooks looks the same as you. And that crook cannot get anybody else's money. There are no false positives, there is no reason to compare the face with the photo of anybody else.

    • by Toad-san ( 64810 )

      If the Chinese can make it work for THEIR people (who all look alike, after all, right?) .. imagine how easy it'll be for us Western barbarians with our round eyes and facial hair and all.

  • Let's say that I want to loan a trusted friend some money. I give him (or her) my ATM card and PIN. They get the cash they need and bring me back the card and receipt. For some people, that's not at all unusual, if they're right about who to trust. Even so, this facial recognition is going to make this kind of routine transaction impossible.
    • Re: (Score:2, Troll)

      by goombah99 ( 560566 )

      I suspect that the ATM won't recognize your personally unless you have your mouth open and your eyes closed.

    • Sure, that would put that kind of transaction in danger.

      On the other hand, maybe that is a good thing.

      And to top it all off, sending money to people is even easier these days. I'm in Canada and I've just gotten used to the email money transfers. $1.50 fee, but its worth the convenience to me.

      I've heard that Asia is really big on mobile payments and transfers, so I'd imagine its much easier there.

      • On the other hand, maybe that is a good thing.

        I don't know if it's a good thing or bad; it all depends, I'd guess, on how often people need to do things like that. I just wanted to point out that there can be times that the facial recognition can cause problems, even without the issue of false negatives.
    • by antiperimetaparalogo ( 4091871 ) on Sunday May 31, 2015 @04:58PM (#49810939)
      Letting someone who you trust use your ATM card and PIN is not unusual but (almost always) it is against the agreed rules between you and the card issuer.
    • by Anonymous Coward

      Who will be accountable for withdrawn money? The friend? The owner? The bank? How can any of these be ensured correctness and be protected against allegations and misunderstandings? These things can turn very nasty very quickly and ruin friendships forever.

      It's a perfect example of trust that's very bad for so many reasons.

      Third, giving out your pin and card is likely a breach of agreement with bank, unless you authorize someone in a supported manner. It's a valid use case, but need some security and proper

    • Sure, and delegated authority over an account is a well established process at all banks. It would be technically easy to add your trusted friend to your list of 'authorised users' and have them able to withdraw the money. Or issue your friend with their own card linked to your account.

    • by xaxa ( 988988 )

      Assuming China is more like Europe than the US on this one, you probably transfer the money directly into your friend's account using a computer or smartphone.

    • Let's say that I want to loan a trusted friend some money. I give him (or her) my ATM card and PIN. They get the cash they need and bring me back the card and receipt. For some people, that's not at all unusual, if they're right about who to trust. Even so, this facial recognition is going to make this kind of routine transaction impossible.

      What you call "routine" the rest of the world pretty much calls "obscure".

      In 25+ years of banking, I've never loaned out my PIN or ATM card. Not even to a family member (they have their own card anyway). If someone needs a loan, they get cash or a check. You know, kind of like how everyone else loans money.

    • by dala1 ( 1842368 )

      At the credit union I work at we would disable your card and not give you a new one. It's a huge security risk.

  • not the first to use it.
  • How do you stop people being kidnapped and force to withdraw the cash - obviously the standard for university research in china Is fucking abysmal. Presumably they have a way of detecting a severed head being held up to the camera or did they not fucking think
    • Perfect is the enemy of improvement. The crime of kidnapping/murder is far more serious than pick pocketing or card cloning. A lot fewer people will try the more serious crime.

      • Perfect is the enemy of improvement. The crime of kidnapping/murder is far more serious than pick pocketing or card cloning. A lot fewer people will try the more serious crime.

        That's always the same on Slashdot. They come up with weird fantasies of kidnapping and so on.

        Stealing or duplicating a credit card is relatively easy and no big risk. If you get caught, the punishment isn't too bad even if you stole a thousand cards. Kidnapping on the other hand doesn't give you any more reward, even a single attempt is dangerous for you, unlike normal kidnapping where you hide the victim you must bring the victim to a public place which hugely increases the risk, and if you are caught

    • by gl4ss ( 559668 )

      they don't need it to. as long as they can say they did the worlds first of X, they'll do it, even if they don't roll it out even.

      you see, that's enough for getting a triple phd in china. even if you just rolled some off the shelf open source software and hacked it into it.

      btw all atm's in asia are buggy. there's something buggy about the ui in every single one, like ok button not being ok on the keypad, the languge selection only affecting some screens or some shit like that. that is when they're not crash

  • So I guess they'll need a photo of me then, right?
    How about some of my DNA, hair and skin samples, and fingerprints too? Store it all on your super secure networks.

    • Actually, they will want several photos of you, but don't sound so indignant. You walk down the street in public every day. Photos of you are not nearly so unusual as you think!
      • by dohzer ( 867770 )

        Classic slippery slop argument.
        They already have photos, so what's a few more. Don't fight the slide.

        Maybe we should be shocked about the fact they take photos of us already.

        • Re:Photo (Score:4, Interesting)

          by jklovanc ( 1603149 ) on Sunday May 31, 2015 @06:54PM (#49811451)

          Perhaps you might look into what slippery slope [nizkor.org] actually means. A slippery slope fallacy argues that if A happens then B will inevitably happen. In this case your premise that requiring picture will inevitably lead to requiring DNA is the slippery slope fallacy. Pictures do not lead to DNA. By the way, we already require pictures on driver's licenses. The GP was refuting your slippery slope argument not making one.

        • "Maybe we should be shocked about the fact they take photos of us already."

          Let's not stop there! Do you know they have our names and our social security numbers! Somebody stop the madness I say. What happened to the days when the governement didn't gather such data .. oh wait .. never mind.

          Don't get me wrong, I am against governemental abuse at least as much as you, but when you chase boogeymen you take attention away from the real issues and make us all look like idiots.

    • How about some of my DNA, hair and skin samples, and fingerprints too? Store it all on your super secure networks.

      Classic meaningless slippery slope argument. By that logic we should not give banks our signature because there will eventually ask for DNA.

      • by dohzer ( 867770 )

        I *don't* want them to have my signature.
        My signature changes everythime I use it. It's not secure. Maybe if I was signing things more than once a year that would change.
        Compared to signing I might as well use a one-digit code.

        • You missed the point. Requiring a signature does not inevitably lead to requiring DNA which is similar to your statement. Both ideas are untrue.

          By the way, what is your alternative?

          • by Khyber ( 864651 )

            I'd require signature and DNA. I'm pretty much leaving both when I sign for something and put my hand on the receipt/check while doing so.

            • A signature is not an alternative to a signature.

              • by Khyber ( 864651 )

                My signature is pretty tough to forge. Apparently nobody I've met knows how to properly write a couple of letters in cursive that happen to be in my name. I also write with my right hand yet everything looks as if it were written by the left. There's also a specific jitter to my signature now due to nerve damage in my wrist. Good luck!

                • How about you read the thread before you reply. The poster stated we should not use signatures.

                  I *don't* want them to have my signature.

                  I was asking what he thought was an alternative. As I said, a signature is not an alternative to a signature.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Is this system capable of dealing with women who wear heavy makeup and decide to change their style? Or what if someone works a side job as a party clown and needs to grab some cash right before a gig? Could you circumvent this system by simply holding up a photo of someone?

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Good luck getting your cash, muslim women. I doubt this system is very niqab- or burqa-friendly, unless it has a camera that can see through clothing, in which case I want one!

    • by KGIII ( 973947 )

      No, just no. No you do not want one. The next time you are outside (assuming you do go outside) take a look at the people around you. They will, inevitably and maybe invariably, end up in your pictures.

  • by Anonymous Coward

    All Caucasians look alike.

  • Which will trouble customers more - the false positives or the false negatives?

  • How does that work? Don't they all look alike?

    (I can't tell if my Korean wife is laughing or not... I'll let you know...)

  • ...picture of Bill Gates across the street from the ATM.

    In related news, Bill Gates no longer richest man in the world.

  • by CanadianMacFan ( 1900244 ) on Sunday May 31, 2015 @07:17PM (#49811533)

    When it's especially cold it would be a pain to undo the bundling just so the ATM can see your face. There's a fine art in layering your clothes (balaclava tucks inside the coat collar, scarf on the outside, etc) to keep the wind out on those -30C days.

    • When it's especially cold it would be a pain to undo the bundling just so the ATM can see your face. There's a fine art in layering your clothes (balaclava tucks inside the coat collar, scarf on the outside, etc) to keep the wind out on those -30C days.

      No problem, just wrap your head in a scarf when they take the ID picture to start with...

    • When it's especially cold it would be a pain to undo the bundling just so the ATM can see your face. There's a fine art in layering your clothes (balaclava tucks inside the coat collar, scarf on the outside, etc) to keep the wind out on those -30C days.

      So, all of your money is stored outside for the winter?

      Wow, that's gotta suck. The rest of us are inside snuggled up next to the common sense ATM location...

      • This may be a difficult concept for you to grasp but you go outside to travel to your bank, walk inside and use the ATM in there. It's not actually worth taking everything off for the minute or two that you are in there before having to go outside again. We're getting indoor plumbing in a few years too!

  • by Anonymous Coward

    At train stations and airports all over China there are luggage storage lockers that work with a combination of pin numbers and face recognition, so this technology has been tested for some years here already. Though adapting the design beyond these very specific environments might present a tricky set of issues.

  • In Taiwan, they photoshop the bastard out of every ID picture. By the time they were done airbrushing and bleaching my wife's picture, it looked like a geisha. They photoshopped makeup on her because she wasn't wearing any. No clue if they do the same thing in China, but that wouldn't match shit here.
  • by Anonymous Coward

    .. should not beat you up before getting to the ATM but after....

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