Publications
Below is a searchable list of publications by the projects of the Priority Program.
1.
Dietz, Felix; Mecke, Lukas; Riesner, Daniel; Alt, Florian
Delusio – Plausible Deniability For Face Recognition Journal Article
In: Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact., vol. 8, no. MHCI, 2024.
Abstract | Links | BibTeX | Tags: biometrics, facial authentication, plausible deniability
@article{10.1145/3676494,
title = {Delusio - Plausible Deniability For Face Recognition},
author = {Felix Dietz and Lukas Mecke and Daniel Riesner and Florian Alt},
url = {https://doi.org/10.1145/3676494},
doi = {10.1145/3676494},
year = {2024},
date = {2024-09-01},
urldate = {2024-09-01},
journal = {Proc. ACM Hum.-Comput. Interact.},
volume = {8},
number = {MHCI},
publisher = {Association for Computing Machinery},
address = {New York, NY, USA},
abstract = {We developed an Android phone unlock mechanism utilizing facial recognition and specific mimics to access a specially secured portion of the device, designed for plausible deniability. The widespread adoption of biometric authentication methods, such as fingerprint and facial recognition, has revolutionized mobile device security, offering enhanced protection against shoulder-surfing attacks and improving user convenience compared to traditional passwords. However, a downside is the potential for third-party coercion to unlock the device. While text-based authentication allows users to reveal a hidden system by entering a special password, this is challenging with face authentication. We evaluated our approach in a role-playing user study involving 50 participants, with one participant acting as the attacker and the other as the suspect. Suspects successfully accessed the secured area, mostly without detection. They further expressed interest in this feature on their personal phones. We also discuss open challenges and opportunities in implementing such authentication mechanisms.},
keywords = {biometrics, facial authentication, plausible deniability},
pubstate = {published},
tppubtype = {article}
}
We developed an Android phone unlock mechanism utilizing facial recognition and specific mimics to access a specially secured portion of the device, designed for plausible deniability. The widespread adoption of biometric authentication methods, such as fingerprint and facial recognition, has revolutionized mobile device security, offering enhanced protection against shoulder-surfing attacks and improving user convenience compared to traditional passwords. However, a downside is the potential for third-party coercion to unlock the device. While text-based authentication allows users to reveal a hidden system by entering a special password, this is challenging with face authentication. We evaluated our approach in a role-playing user study involving 50 participants, with one participant acting as the attacker and the other as the suspect. Suspects successfully accessed the secured area, mostly without detection. They further expressed interest in this feature on their personal phones. We also discuss open challenges and opportunities in implementing such authentication mechanisms.