Report: Samsung copies misleading Apple logo, misleadingly, at its Las Vegas conference.

Samsung, during its activity at the Consumer Electronics Show (CES 2020) in Las Vegas, America, did something strange that everyone noticed in the field of technology, which is that the company "stole" a well-known image of a famous feature with iPhone and used it to display its own products.
 
The "Face ID" logo or icon, which Apple linked to the 3D facial recognition feature it presented in 2017 with the iPhone X, appeared during the Samsung press conference and left everyone at a loss, according to the BGR website on technical affairs. .
 
Soon everyone criticized Samsung for its glaring copy of Apple again, and the criticism came even from some of the company's biggest fans. But the problem is much more than simply copying an image of Apple, according to the site.
 
Samsung used the "face ID" icon in part of its presentation at the Consumer Electronics Show related to its product, "Samsung Pass", which depends on biometrics to verify the user's identity and helps him say "Goodbye to forgotten passwords," according to the Samsung website .
 
The slide that Samsung implied implicitly assumes that all of the sensors included in the slide (shown in the main image) can be used to verify users' identity, including retina, face ID, heart rate, fingerprints, activity sensors, and GPS .
 
Samsung has never explicitly mentioned 3D facial recognition technology or any other biometrics solutions on that slide.
Therefore, the presence of a very similar symbol to the 3D face ID of Apple is hugely misleading, and is a blatant fraud, according to the BGR website.
 
According to the site, users who know the meaning of that image or symbol may assume that Samsung also has a feature of 3D facial recognition on its devices, although this is not true.
 
Samsung phones use 2D facial recognition technology, which is much less secure than Apple's face identity technology. Moreover, most Samsung smartphones do not have the 2D face recognition feature.
 
The Samsung Pass website has no mention of 3D facial recognition technology, but it does mention "face recognition" as one of the biometrics used in Samsung devices.
 
The controversial "face ID" icon does not appear on this site. But the interesting thing about the screen image from the website mentioned is that the phone that Samsung used to promote the service does not exist at all.
 
The phone below does not have any clear technology that can be used to scan the retina, let alone three-dimensional facial recognition.

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