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> While law enforcement in the US can force a suspect to unlock their Apple device via Touch ID, this is believed to be the first recorded incident in which law enforcement in any country has used a search warrant to force a mobile device owner to bypass the facial recognition technology

So–at the very least–no less secure than Touch ID.

TouchID and FaceID where never about security in the first place. They’re about convenience. Nothing more.

You want security, turn off the convenience features, set a pass phrase and plead the 5th.

FaceID and TouchID is like me writing my house address on my keys and then losing them while thinking “oh well, the house is locked”.

TouchID and FaceID are like setting the door to auto-lock when you leave your apartment. Sure, setting the second lock is more secure. But most people won't bother with that. Because for most people, it isn't worth the bother ex ante. TouchID and FaceID have enabled broad-population security practices in a way preaching passwords-only never could have.