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Apple needs to find a way to make FaceID actually useful when wearing masks, and manual passcode entry isn't it.
Apple’s facial recognition tool raises a host of questions about the limits of individual privacy and our legal right to preserve it.
It's important Apple hold to its commitment that face prints developed through FaceID are stored only locally on devices, and be fully encrypted with a key that even Apple doesn't possess.
Could FaceID on Apple's iPhone X pose a conflict of self-incrimination? Legal experts weigh in.
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