can a dead man finger prints unlocks phone
By Yasemin
Saplakoglu, Staff Writer | April 24, 2018 10:24am ET
Credit:
Shutterstock
In March,
two detectives went to a funeral home and asked to see a body. The reason? They
wanted to unlock the man's phone and needed his fingerprints,
according to news reports. And though the detectives were granted access to the
man's body, they couldn't unlock the phone.
The man,
Linus Phillip, was shot and killed by a police officer outside a Wawa
convenience store in Largo, Florida. Detectives were looking for information to
help them investigate Phillip's death as well as information about a separate
investigation involving drugs, according to the Tampa Bay Times.
What the
detectives did is legal, as Forbes reported,
but it certainly raises ethical questions. And given that the detectives were
unsuccessful, it resurfaces a science question as well: Do you need to be alive
for your fingertips to unlock your phone?
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In fact,
it gets more difficult to unlock a phone using fingertips the longer a person
has been dead, said Anil Jain, a professor of computer science and engineering
who has spent years working on fingerprint recognition at Michigan State
University and one of the authors of the "Handbook of Fingerprint
Recognition" (Springer, 2009). [9 Odd Ways Your Tech
Devices May Injure You].
This is because, on most smartphones, fingerprint identification works
through electrical conductance, Jain told Live Science.
We all
have a little bit of electricity running through our bodies. When we place our
fingertips on a fingerprint scanner, the ridges of our fingerprint touch the
surface whereas the valleys don’t. Tiny capacitors —
devices that store electrical charge —
will store more charge coming from the finger if they sit under ridges than
they would under valleys. The sensors will use these patterns to form a
detailed image. But when a person dies, that flow of electricity ceases, and
with it, any chance of interacting with the scanner.
Scientists are unsure how long exactly after a person dies the body
loses this conductance. To figure that out, you would "need a lot of dead
bodies, and you [would] have to take their fingerprints to unlock the phone
every hour or so … somebody has to be in the morgue continuously," Jain
said. "It's a pretty difficult experiment to do."
Not all fingerprint readers work through conductance, however. Older
fingerprint readers, for example, use optical sensors that measure the changes
in light between the ridges and valleys to form an image. But this method is
easier to fool with photographs, since no electricity is required, making the
systems easier to hack.
And the technology is ever-changing: Take, for example, the iPhone X,
which doesn't have a separate button to read fingerprints, but rather unlocks
when it detects your face.
Future
phones have optical sensors beneath their screens, Jain said. It's unclear if
these will be accessible with lifeless fingers, he added, but conductance
wouldn't be an issue in such a case. Other new technology includes "ultrasonic"
scanners that send ultrasonic waves into the finger to measure the stress
patterns that result from ridges and valleys. How these will interact with
lifeless fingers is still to be determined.
Still, all of these sensors will be affected by the fact that "the
skin gets noisy over time," Jain said. "If there's no blood flow,
then the fingers will start showing some kind of wrinkles or shrivel up."
This will change the signals of the ridges and valleys, creating new ones and
erasing older ones so that the sensor will detect something completely unlike
the original fingerprint, he said.
What's more, most phones have some sort of buffer that would make it
more difficult for someone to use your fingerprint to unlock your phone after
your death, Jain added. That is, most phones require you to type in a passcode
after a day or two of inactivity, and you typically get only a certain number
of attempts, he said.
But if someone does manage to get around these hurdles, and the body is
only recently deceased, it is certainly possible to unlock a phone using
lifeless fingers, Jain said.
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