According to a new rumor originating from South Korea, both Samsung
and LG are gearing up to launch smartphones with iris-based
authentication systems. The report claims that the two manufacturers
might equip iris scanners on commercial smartphones as early as next
year, meaning that it wouldn't be entirely impossible for next year's
Samsung Galaxy S7 and LG G5 to both integrate the new biometric login
systems.
About
a year and a half ago when the first rumors on the topic started
spreading in the tech blogosphere, iris scanners were considered to be a
bit of a futuristic technology, which is why probably only few were
disappointed that the only biometric login option featured by the Galaxy
S5 was a fingerprint reader. Fast forward to present day, however, and
the age of smartphone-mounted iris scanners is upon us.
To our knowledge, the Vivo X5 Pro, launched in China last month, was the first smartphone to use iris-scanning authentication technology. The Fujitsu Arrows NX F-04G,
recently launched in Japan as an NTT DoCoMo exclusive, also comes with a
similar feature. It's not uncommon for new and forward-thinking
smartphone technologies to be first adopted in East Asia and then
migrate towards Western markets several months later.
It
remains to be seen how well current-generation iris scanners actually
work. Fingerprint readers needed a few good years to mature from a
technology that only captured headlines but didn't work so well in
practice into a quick and reliable authentication method, and it's not
entirely unreasonable to think that we're in for more of the same with
iris scanners.
If this new rumor turns out to
be accurate, then the Samsung Galaxy S7 and the LG G5 could both make
use of iris scanners. Since the two flagships are most likely in the
very early stages of development, chances are that the feature is not a
lock for the upcoming flagships. Both Samsung and LG routinely launch
South Korean exclusive versions of their flagships, and it would
certainly be possible for the two companies to test out the new feature
in their domestic market first.
The new report
argues that iris recognition systems are more secure than fingerprint
readers, which makes the new technology a perfect fit for the mobile
payment market, one that Samsung will soon tackle head-first when Samsung Pay launches this fall.
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