Vietnamese Company Fools Face ID on iPhone X with 3D-Printed Mask

Published November 29th, 2017 - 03:16 GMT
Verdict: Users shouldn’t use Face ID to secure sensitive data. Simple. (Courtesy of Bkav)
Verdict: Users shouldn’t use Face ID to secure sensitive data. Simple. (Courtesy of Bkav)

A couple of weeks ago we reported that Vietnamese cybersecurity firm Bkav fooled Face ID& with a cheap mask, and now it’s repeated the trick even more convincingly.

Using a new mask apparently built for around $200 using materials such as stone powder and a 3D printer - which should be obtainable by most people - the researchers shot a video showing the iPhone X unlock for it. 

Mobily to Start Delivering All New iPhone X

But this time the firm also showed the person who the mask was based on enrolling in Face ID, so you can be sure that the mask wasn’t enrolled as the primary user.

The attention detection feature was also enabled, which is designed to ensure the user is looking at the phone before unlocking it.

It unlocked flawlessly twice in a row for the mask, which sounds worrying, and indeed Bkav reckons that based on this users shouldn’t use Face ID to secure sensitive data or in business transactions.

Fooling it still doesn't sound easy

But how much of a risk is it really? Bkav says that to make a 3D model of someone’s face would require secretly taking photos of them when they enter a room containing a pre-setup system of cameras located at different angles.

Then the photos would need to be processed by algorithms, and then you’d need to 3D print a mask. As well as, of course, actually gaining access to the user’s phone.

A to X: What You Get When You Buy Apple's iPhone 8, iPhone 8 Plus or iPhone X

That sounds like way more work than a typical thief would bother with for a random target, so unless you have very sensitive information on your iPhone X we wouldn’t think you need to worry.

Our Verdict

The iPhone 8 is an incremental update over the iPhone 7 – it's strange that Apple decided against the 7S name here, as there's not a lot of new technology on offer beyond the improved screen and faster innards.

By James Rogerson

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