Tag: emit

  • Apple publishes change list detailing recent AirTag firmware updates

    Apple publishes change list detailing recent AirTag firmware updates

    Following up on two AirTag firmware updates since November, a new AirTag support article ha been published that allows users to see what’s changed.

    Apple updated the AirTag on November 10 to version 2.0.24. The update, detailed by Apple, enables Precision Finding to help users locate an unknown AirTag following them. The AirTag also will emit a noise.

    The feature is part of Apple’s commitment to prevent people from using an AirTag to stalk others.

    Apple also released version 2.0.36 of its AirTag firmware on December 12. The update addressed a bug where the accelerometer was not activating in certain scenarios.

    While users typically have ways to update devices’ firmware manually, there is no such option for AirTag. Instead, users have to wait for it to occur on its own.

    The AirTag’s firmware version can be checked by using the Find My app on your phone. Once in Find My, tap the relevant AirTag, then tap the battery icon for the AirTag — this will display the serial number and the firmware version.

    Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.

    Via AppleInsider, support.apple.com, and 9to5Mac

  • Apple patent proposes mapping a user’s veins to overcome “evil twin” hurdle

    This could be interesting.

    A recently published Apple patent entitled “Vein matching for difficult biometric authentication cases” shows that Apple may be looking to improve its Face ID and other visual-based biometric systems by taking advantage of the unique and hard to copy patterns of veins that reside under the skin. If successful, this could resolve the infamous “twin problem,” in which similar-looking people can trick the Face ID protocol.

    At present, while Face ID security is good, it is still fallible by a number of areas, such as having a very small false-positive rate, which in the case of Face ID is in the realm of one in a million. 

    In the past, users have been able to trick Face ID via the use of highly complex masks, the “twin problem” sometimes granting unauthorized access to people who look extremely alike, such as twins of family members.

    Apple’s patent proposes studying the veins a few millimeters below the skin. While facial features can be easily copied, vein patterns differ wildly between individuals, even twins. As they are also below the skin and occupy 3D space, it is also extremely difficult to create a counterfeit face that takes into account the vein structure without either the extreme cooperation of the subject, or medically invasive maneuvers. 

    The system consists of creating a 3D map of a user’s veins via sub-dermal imaging techniques, such as an infrared sensor in a camera capturing flood and speckle patterns from infrared illuminators lighting up the user’s face. The current incarnation of Face ID studies infrared light patterns emitted on a user’s face, which is then read by an imaging device. The patent specifically focuses on a technique that detects the veins under the skin as opposed to the exterior.

    Apple’s proposed system also works to determine whether there’s a close-enough match between scanned data and previously-taken data that’s been used to register the usr. If the match is close enough, the system authorizes the uses and grants access to the device.

    The patent lists its inventors as Micah P. Kalscheur and Feng Tang, and was filed in February 2018. The patent application first surfaced in searches in March 2019. 

    Stay tuned for additional details as they become available.

    Via AppleInsider and the United States Patent and Trademark Office