Features taken for granted on mobile phones could usher in the next level of
security for mobile devices, according to a university professor.
Plymouth
University's Steve Furnell said that cameras, touch screens and microphones
could all be used in the future to protect the data stored on mobile phones and
PDAs.
"If we want to go down the biometric route, maybe we could use things which
already exist on mobile devices rather than have any additional expense,"
Professor Furnell said in his keynote address at the
Infosec
trade show in London.
"There is a camera on most phones now so why not try to leverage some of that
for facial recognition?
"Potentially you could do something with signature recognition on a
touch-sensitive screen or gesture recognition. You could also use voice
verification in some contexts using a standard microphone."
Professor Furnell also suggested the use of behavioural recognition to
establish a user's identity on a device.
This included keystroke dynamics, which is currently being researched at
Plymouth University, looking at elements such as the way people type and send
text messages.
"While keystroke dynamics did not work for everyone, it was effective for
certain people," said Professor Furnell.
He added that biometrics options such as the fingerprint detector on the back
of Compaq's iPaq had failed to catch on, with only one in eight models in the UK
including the technology.
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