Both my Nexus 6P and iPad have scanners and they work very well. I can’t think of any notable/immediate disadvantages, but if I did, I could just as well disable the feature.
Actually, that’s not true. One “disadvantage” is that some stores are dragging their feet with tap and pay terminals. :mad:You can swipe a card anywhere, but it’s laughably vulnerable.
This is so true our youngest is autistic and doesn’t quite get that he is not allowed to order stuff on amazon and is quite observant with a photographic memory.
and agree with what Beowulf said, apple pay, bank access on phone, ease of unlock , apple store family sharing and approval and Amazon approval .
It doesn’t always work with dirty or wet hands and some phone cases, and for some people thats a deal breaker, but each to their own.
“I’m sorry, Sven, but the biometric scanner shows that it is you who stole all of the widgets. We are going to have to prosecute.”
“Uh, did you check the security camera?”
“Oh, duh! Any facility that is investing in biometric identification is probably interested enough in security to at least install a camera!”
When a fingerprint scanner scans your finger it looks for something like 24 “minutia” or small imperfection points on your fingerprint and then creates a one way hash of the description of those points. However even if you could decode that hash there is no reason to believe that another scanner would choose those same points so the likelihood of another device with your thumb print could be hacked with only the same data points.
There is a scanner they use in north Carolina at the medical facilities which scans your palm for the patterns of the blood vessels. Presumably if you cut off the person’s hand the blood vessels may move around. Supposed to be better than fingerprints and I never had to have them scan more than once. Could even work on phones with pixel sense, where each pixel has a tiny camera.