Facial verification sounds secure on paper, but it's surprisingly vulnerable in practice. The gap between security theory and real-world implementation exposes some uncomfortable truths. How many platforms have actually tested whether their facial recognition systems can be defeated? It's worth asking—especially as more Web3 services rely on biometric verification for account security. What are the actual vulnerability rates we're seeing out there?
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GasGrillMaster
· 15h ago
Oh boy, another set of theories that are perfect in theory but fail in reality... Web3 really dares to implement face verification, but has anyone thought about how this can be fooled with photo editing?
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PhantomHunter
· 15h ago
Surface-level security can never fool people; when it comes to actual combat, the true nature is revealed.
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ConsensusBot
· 15h ago
Speaking of this, someone has already stepped on the landmine long ago. The facial recognition security measures are extremely fragile, and the security on paper is just a joke.
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Degen4Breakfast
· 15h ago
ngl this is the biggest challenge in Web3 security. Everything looks perfect on paper, but in reality, there are countless bugs. How many platforms are willing to openly disclose how many times their facial recognition has been hacked...
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ProposalDetective
· 15h ago
Well... I've long wanted to complain about whether facial recognition is effective or not; it just feels like armchair strategy.
Facial verification sounds secure on paper, but it's surprisingly vulnerable in practice. The gap between security theory and real-world implementation exposes some uncomfortable truths. How many platforms have actually tested whether their facial recognition systems can be defeated? It's worth asking—especially as more Web3 services rely on biometric verification for account security. What are the actual vulnerability rates we're seeing out there?