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Business / Qatar Business

Huawei uses AI for all-around privacy security safeguards

Published: 05 Mar 2020 - 12:43 am | Last Updated: 16 Nov 2021 - 08:04 pm
AI Huawei

AI Huawei

The Peninsula

DOHA: Even with AI’s increasing ability to do “human things”, AI is all just based on data. While it does improve production efficiency in the society through acquiring and analyzing data, AI could also pose potential privacy risks. To address this concern, terminal device brands have been researching and developing applicable technical measures to protect user privacy and security. Huawei is no exception.

Nowadays, phones are so much more than simple communication tools. While fingerprint and facial unlocking provides unprecedented convenience for our interactions with our devices, it is worth considering how such important biometric data could incur risks should it be unlawfully obtained by ill-intended parties. How can we protect this important information – this is where AI shows some potential. And that’s exactly what Huawei engineers have turned to, placing at least 3 AI-powered security safeguards.

Firstly, biometric data such as fingerprints, facial features, and iris information are securely stored in a TEE (Trusted Execution Environment) OS — which is based on an independent micro-kernel architecture — on the phone, instead of uploaded to a cloud server (not even a Huawei server). This measure effectively prevents any possible data leakage between terminals and clouds.

Secondly, the TEE OS is isolated from the phone’s OS – they are separated on the hardware level. In other words, a secure operating system is established using the Arm TrustZone chipset, which meets the highest security certification of the mobile OS field — CC EAL 5+ —fundamentally blocking any external interception or theft.

Finally, the phone’s OS feeds back to apps only the results of biometric data comparison, such as “matched” or “not matched”, rather than the information itself. Huawei Pay, Secure key, SkyTone, and many other Huawei mobile functions are properly monitored by iTrustee, with multiple measures in place to ensure user privacy and data security.

Huawei HiVoice is so smart that it knows exactly what it can, and can’t do. Voice assistants are an important invention coming out of AI, and are widely seen in consumer products. While they can be incredibly helpful, sometimes we can’t help but be a little paranoid about them listening in and spying on our conversions. Huawei HiVoice developers have also taken that into account, and set the moral bottom line the moment HiVoice was born — it cannot activate itself to listen to anything it wants, let alone issue any commands without permission; instead, everything needs to be a direct instruction by the phone’s owner.

When HiVoice is indeed activated by the user, it’s immensely helpful, and even warm and considerate, in our daily life and work. AI-enabled features include making to-do reminders, mobile data reports, and reminders for the weather. All of them are processed locally on the device, without uploading any personal data to the cloud, more reassuring for consumers.

The above-mentioned is only a part of the multi-dimensional AI privacy protection mechanism deployed on Huawei consumer products. Although AI is integrating into basically every facet of our lives, it doesn’t have to mean that our privacy is compromised in any way. More reassuring for consumers