Yakov Bart in News@Northeastern: Should You Sell Your Palm Print to Amazon? | Global Resilience Institute

Amazon is offering $10 in store credit to anyone who hands over their palm prints for use at the company’s register-free brick and mortar stores—a move that may make check-out quicker and more convenient for customers, but comes with plenty of privacy risk, say two Northeastern scholars of law and marketing.

“Biometric information is permanent,” says Ari Waldman, professor of law and computer science at Northeastern. “You can change your name, credit card information, and phone number fairly quickly, but you can’t change your fingerprint, or the unique characteristics of your palm. And once you give a company your biometric data, it could track you forever with that information.”

Amazon introduced biometric palm scanners last year, called Amazon One devices, so customers could pay for goods at its in-person stores by waving their hands over the devices on their way out. To cash in on the $10 credit, Amazon users have to enroll their palm prints in the scanners and link the information to their accounts.

The devices are available at 53 Amazon stores across the United States, including some Whole Foods Markets.

The e-commerce company isn’t the first to incorporate biometric data into its products and services—people can unlock their Apple iPhones, Google Pixel smartphones, and Samsung Galaxy phones with their fingerprints or by facial recognition. And Amazon won’t be the last company, either, says Yakov Bart, associate professor of marketing at Northeastern.

“We’re seeing an explosion of biometric-based systems in business and if anything, it will just keep becoming more prevalent as cloud processing enables companies to use the data without needing to make the software and hardware for themselves,” says Bart, who is also the Joseph G. Riesman research professor in the D’Amore-McKim School of Business.

 

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