
The majority
of consumers say there are benefits to using voice recognition as a form of personal verification, according to a new study.
Most (81%) consumers see the benefits of using voice recognition
for personal verification and nearly half (48%) said they would likely it, based on the survey of 3,300 U.S. adults conducted by Harris Poll for Pindrop, a voice security company.
Benefits
expected are not having to remember passwords (59%), not worrying about changing passwords (49%), verification can't be guessed or stolen (41%), can access account quickly (37%) and voices can't be
cloned (22%).
However, most (94%) American believe there are potential drawbacks, including may not work well because of background noise (61%), may not work accurately every time (60%), voice
can be cloned and used against them (48%), may have difficulty recognizing accents (43%), may not be secure (39%), requires you to speak loudly and clearly (36%) and lack of info on how voice as
personal verification works (31%).