Nov. 29, 2023, 12:09 p.m. | Bruce Schneier

Schneier on Security www.schneier.com

They’re not that good:


Security researchers Jesse D’Aguanno and Timo Teräs write that, with varying degrees of reverse-engineering and using some external hardware, they were able to fool the Goodix fingerprint sensor in a Dell Inspiron 15, the Synaptic sensor in a Lenovo ThinkPad T14, and the ELAN sensor in one of Microsoft’s own Surface Pro Type Covers. These are just three laptop models from the wide universe of PCs, but one of these three companies usually does make …

authentication biometrics breaking dell engineering external fingerprint fingerprints fingerprint sensor fingerprint sensors good goodix hardware identification laptop lenovo microsoft own pro reports researchers reverse security security researchers sensor sensors thinkpad vulnerabilities

SOC 2 Manager, Audit and Certification

@ Deloitte | US and CA Multiple Locations

Cybersecurity Engineer

@ Booz Allen Hamilton | USA, VA, Arlington (1550 Crystal Dr Suite 300) non-client

Invoice Compliance Reviewer

@ AC Disaster Consulting | Fort Myers, Florida, United States - Remote

Technical Program Manager II - Compliance

@ Microsoft | Redmond, Washington, United States

Head of U.S. Threat Intelligence / Senior Manager for Threat Intelligence

@ Moonshot | Washington, District of Columbia, United States

Customer Engineer, Security, Public Sector

@ Google | Virginia, USA; Illinois, USA