Now that the iPhone X has finally made its way into the world, we’ve gotten a little more perspective
on the matter. Not only have we seen how Face ID is a major departure from previous facial recognition systems, but we’ve also had Apple executives point out that the company had long ago made the decision to ditch Touch ID for Face ID, which we should have all logically considered when the rumours were flying, as the company’s not going to be struggling with design decisions mere months before they ship millions of devices. But now that Face ID is about to become part of many of our daily lives, it’s worth considering what else might be in store for this technology. Because if the company’s moving away from Touch ID in its flagship device, you can bet that Face ID is here to stay.
More faces
As good as the early reviews say Face ID is, the technology isn’t without its limitations. Some of these are on the minor side: for example, certain types of sunglasses might not be compatible because they block the wavelength of light needed for the infraredbased equipment in the True Depth cameras. Likewise, those of us in colder climes might need to pull down our scarves in order for the camera to recognize us. Hardly deal-breakers, but inconveniences. (Let’s not laud Touch ID and pretend it didn’t have its own problems, or have you never had to retrain the sensor when your skin was too dry?)
But in one way Face ID does take a step back from Touch ID: it only supports enrolling a single face. For many people that may be no problem at all, but for those users who allow others to use their device – a partner, child, parent, or so on – it can be frustrating to have to revert back to sharing a strong, possibly hard to remember passcode (and your passcode is strong, right?).
Similarly, sharing a password is a bigger security risk, since it allows for access to many protected parts of iOS that are otherwise inaccessible. And if you wanted to revoke the access you’d given someone with Touch ID, it was easy enough to remove a fingerprint from the device; changing your passcode is definitely more annoying.
In some ways this is easy to reconcile with Apple’s philosophy – the company has always pushed the idea that an iPhone is really for a single user. (Ever tried to buy or download apps with multiple iTunes accounts?) But I’m also convinced that the company will eventually expand Face ID’s purview to handle different people accessing the same device, for one very good reason.
More devices
Although the iPhone X is the first Apple device to incorporate Face ID, it’s a solid bet that it won’t
be the last. The simplest reason is that if it does indeed provide the most reliable and most powerful
form of biometric security, why restrict it to just a single device? Moreover, Apple would no doubt like to offer the feature on other devices to allow users to have a single authentication method on all their devices. The iPad is the most obvious choice for the next device to get Face ID, at least if it follows the previous example of Touch ID. Bringing the system to another iOS device ought to be relatively straightforward, and Apple would no doubt like to get rid of the home button on its tablet and free up valuable space there as well. (Plus, the swiping up gesture to bring up the Dock and multitasking interfaces on the iPad in iOS 11 is already reminiscent of the iPhone X’s replacement
for the home button.)
More interesting, however, is the Mac. Touch ID has been slow to migrate to the Mac, appearing only on the Touch Bar-enabled MacBook Pros. But the Touch Bar has been one of the company’s less popular features of recent years, and while many – myself included – had expected the company might integrate Touch ID into a Magic Keyboard or Magic Trackpad, it certainly seems plausible that the company decided to skip that entirely once it had made the decision to bet on Face ID. And unlike iOS devices, Macs don’t generally suffer from the same limited space or power problems that Apple has to balance on phones and tablets. Plus it opens up a better experience for using Apple Pay on
your Mac, and let’s be honest: it’ll probably be even more reliable than logging in to your Mac using your Apple Watch.
Both iPads and Macs are far more likely to be shared between multiple users, and Macs of course have explicit support for multiple accounts – which, on Touch ID-enabled MacBook Pros, even supports user-switching via fingerprints. So it seems a pretty good bet that Face ID would follow in that feature’s footsteps. And hey, maybe it will even encourage Apple to acknowledge that iPads get shared between different users as well, and finally bring the multi-user support enabled for education into mainstream usage, but perhaps that’s a topic for another day.