Skip to main content

Forget fingerprints: Your phone could lock out thieves by learning your ‘touch signature’

latentgesture learns tap phone
Photo via Georgia Tech news center Image used with permission by copyright holder

Researchers from the Georgia Institute of Technology have developed a new security system that continuously tracks how you swipe and tap on your mobile devices to keep thieves from using your smartphone or tablet. The new system, called LatentGesture, can be programmed to lock a device whenever movements don’t match the owner’s tendencies. 

“The system learns a person’s ‘touch signature,’ then constantly compares it to how the current user is interacting with the device,” said Polo Chau, the lead researcher for the study, in an interview published in the Georgia Tech website. “Just like your fingerprint, everyone is unique when they use a touchscreen … Some people slide the bar with one quick swipe. Others gradually move it across the screen. Everyone taps the screen with different pressures while checking boxes.”

Recommended Videos

LatentGesture was tested during a Georgia Tech lab study using Android devices and was found to have an accuracy rate of 98 percent for smartphones and 97 percent for tablets. The research study involved 20 test subjects. The participants were asked to tap buttons, check boxes, and swipe slider bars on an electronic form. After the system made profiles for each user, the researchers designated one person as the owner for each tablet. When the tests were repeated, the system successfully recognized the owners and kept out the unauthorized users. 

Aside from the system’s security applications, LatentGesture could also be used for parental control purposes. “This feature could be used when a child uses her dad’s tablet … The system would recognize her touch signature and allow her to use the device. But if she tried to buy an app, the system could prevent it,” said student researcher Premkumar Saravanan.

LatentGesture will be presented in Toronto at the upcoming ACM Chinese CHI, a forum for human-computer interaction research.

Christian Brazil Bautista
Christian Brazil Bautista is an experienced journalist who has been writing about technology and music for the past decade…
Best early Black Friday deals under $100: Amazon Echo, TVs, headphones and more
The Amazon Echo Pop on a desk.

Update 11/19/24: Black Friday is still over a week away, but you can already start your shopping with the Black Friday deals under $100 that we've gathered here. There's a possibility that these affordable items get even bigger discounts when the sale officially launches, but we won't blame you if you're already tempted by today's prices.

Black Friday will start on November 29, but if you've already got the itch to shop, check out the early Black Friday deals under $100 that we've gathered here. The offers cover smart home devices, laptops, TVs, kitchen gadgets, and so much more, so if you want to start enjoying discounts without blowing your entire budget for the shopping event, take a look at our favorite bargains below.

Read more
The Galaxy A56 may get one of the S24 Ultra’s top features
A person using the Samsung Galaxy A55.

Samsung may be ready to change one of the long-standing negatives about its otherwise desirable Galaxy A5x series phones — the charging speed. For the Galaxy A55’s replacement, currently expected to be called the Galaxy A56, Samsung may introduce 45-watt charging speeds, a big increase over the current 25W charging, according to a report originating in China.

The source is an official-looking certificate from the Chinese government’s Quality Certification Centre (CQC) which is responsible for ensuring devices sold in China meet the required standards. The phone is listed as the SM-A5660, and seeing as the Galaxy A55’s model number is the SM-A556, it’s not much of a stretch to assume we’re looking at details of the unreleased Galaxy A56. Apparently, the phone’s maximum 10V/4.5A system equates to a 45W charging speed.

Read more
I used a Wear OS smartwatch for the first time, and I love it
Someone wearing an Apple Watch Ultra and Pixel Watch 3 on different wrists.

Ever since the original Apple Watch, smartwatches as a whole have really taken off. Though Apple largely dominates the market, there are still plenty of non-Apple smartwatches to choose from.

I’ve been solely an Apple Watch user for the past decade, but I’ve been trying out a Google Pixel Watch 3 for the past couple of weeks. And, honestly, I kind of love it.
A round smartwatch is so much sleeker

Read more