our fingerprint is not protected
under the 5th amendment, so police in the US can force you
to unlock a phone with a fingerprint, but not a password -
from 2014, those tiny skin ridges we all share were at the
heart of a Virginia court case last week in which a judge
ruled that police, who suspected there was incriminating
evidence on a suspect’s smartphone, could legally force the
man to unlock his device with its fingerprint scanner. While
the Fifth Amendment protects defendants from revealing their
numeric passcodes, which would be considered a
self-incriminating testimonial, biometrics like fingerprint
scans fall outside the law’s scope.
“If you are being forced to divulge something that you know,
that’s not okay,” said Marcia Hofmann, an attorney and
special counsel to digital rights group Electronic Frontier
Foundation. “If the government is able through other means
to collect evidence that just exists, then they certainly
can do that without stepping on the toes of the
constitutional protection.” “The important thing is,”
Hofmann said, “is it something you know, or something you
have?”
Showing posts with label Fingerprints. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Fingerprints. Show all posts
Aug 1, 2020
May 3, 2013
How Fingerprints are Formed
By the 17th week of pregnancy,
the fingerprints of a fetus are set. The uniqueness of fingerprints
has been recognized and studied scientifically for two centuries,
but researchers have not been able to explain exactly how they form.
A new theoretical computer model describes how the patterns are
likely created, beginning in the 10th week of gestation, when a
fetus is about 3 inches (80 mm) long.
Researchers at the University of Arizona found that creation of the patterns involves stresses in a sandwiched sheet of skin called the basal layer. In a fetus, the basal layer grows faster than surrounding layers, the outer epidermis and the inner dermis. The basal layer buckles and folds in several directions, forcing complex shapes. Stresses are created at skin boundaries, including fingernails and knuckle creases, as well as around shrinking fingertip pads.
The fingerprint pattern is coded underneath the skin surface, does not change as we age, and the pattern cannot be destroyed by superficial skin injuries.
General characteristics of fingerprints can be inherited, so family members do tend have similar, but still unique fingerprint patterns. Even Siamese twins and identical twins have varying fingerprints.
Fingerprints are impressions made by the ridges on the ends of the fingers and thumbs. These ridges provide friction, or traction, when we grasp objects so that those objects do not slip through our fingers. Fingerprints are on the fingers and palms, but not on any other places of the skin. Scientists also believe that they may enhance our sense of touch.
Koalas have ridges on their fingers which create fingerprints very much like those of human beings.
Researchers at the University of Arizona found that creation of the patterns involves stresses in a sandwiched sheet of skin called the basal layer. In a fetus, the basal layer grows faster than surrounding layers, the outer epidermis and the inner dermis. The basal layer buckles and folds in several directions, forcing complex shapes. Stresses are created at skin boundaries, including fingernails and knuckle creases, as well as around shrinking fingertip pads.
The fingerprint pattern is coded underneath the skin surface, does not change as we age, and the pattern cannot be destroyed by superficial skin injuries.
General characteristics of fingerprints can be inherited, so family members do tend have similar, but still unique fingerprint patterns. Even Siamese twins and identical twins have varying fingerprints.
Fingerprints are impressions made by the ridges on the ends of the fingers and thumbs. These ridges provide friction, or traction, when we grasp objects so that those objects do not slip through our fingers. Fingerprints are on the fingers and palms, but not on any other places of the skin. Scientists also believe that they may enhance our sense of touch.
Koalas have ridges on their fingers which create fingerprints very much like those of human beings.
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