- Amazon is working on a new technology that would allow customers at its Whole Foods stores to check out by just waving their hands, according to the New York Post.
- The technology would keep track of the size and shape of customers' hands and link that data to their accounts and payment information, according to the report.
- Amazon plans to start rolling out the technology by early next year, the Post reported.
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You soon might be able to pay for your groceries at Whole Foods with just a wave.
Amazon, which owns the high-end grocery chain, is developing a system to identify and keep tabs on the size and shape of customers' hands, according to a report Tuesday in the New York Post. The company plans to link that data to customers' accounts and payment information, according to the report. It plan to start rolling out the technology to its Whole Foods store by early next next year, where new scanners would be able to identify customers by their hands and authorize their purchases, the Post reported.
Amazon representatives did not immediately respond to a request for comment.
The system will rely on depth scanning and computer vision technologies, according to the report. Amazon is pursuing it, because it promises to significantly speed up customer check-outs. Traditional credit card payment systems take about three to four seconds to process, but Amazon's hand-scanning system can process a payment in less than 300 milliseconds, the Post reported, citing an unnamed "person familiar with the project."
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Tech companies have been developing and deploying sensors that can detect individuals by certain characteristics unique to them or their bodies for years now. In some cases, that information is already used to authorize payments.
For example, older versions of Apple's iPhones and iPads, for example, include fingerprint sensors, while newer ones include a sophisticated facial recognition system, and both systems can be used to approve payments. Other so-called biometric systems can recognize people by their irises or by their voices.
Such systems can be more secure and easier to use than passwords, because people don't have to remember them. However security experts worry that a compromise of such data can be far more dangerous than having passwords stolen. That's because unlike a password, a person's face or hand generally can't be changed.
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