Identity, Security, Payments, Biometrics, Smart Cards and Authentication News

More markets for biometric authentication will open up

Monday, December 17, 2007

Matthew Bogart, Vice President, Marketing, Bioscrypt Inc.

The financial, healthcare and government sectors have been among the early adopters of biometric identity and access management solutions. In 2008, biometric authentication will continue to expand into more industries for both physical and logical access control as they, too, look to benefit from the enhanced security and convenience of biometrics. Biometric authentication uses a factor of identity verification unique to an individual that can’t be lost or stolen. At the same time, users don’t have to go through a rigorous authentication process–they only have to present their finger or face, for example.


Fingerprint biometrics will remain the dominant biometric as it is the most widely deployed and therefore the most mature. It also doesn’t cost as much. Fingerprint readers will find their way not only to the entrances of more doors, but on more laptops and mobile devices.

Face readers will grow in popularity as a hands-free alternative. They have proven themselves in high-volume applications, such as The Venetian Macao-Resort-Hotel. It’s the world’s biggest casino in the world’s second largest building and 12,000 workers use 13 face readers placed at the employee entrance to authenticate themselves as they head into work.

Face readers will also be used for network access control with the development of desk cams that can authenticate users as they sit down in front of their PCs or laptops.

Biometrics are also finding their way into consumer products such as mobile phones and PDAs. Banks are turning to biometrics as well to authenticate online customers in response to the Federal Financial Institutions Examination Council’s regulation recommendation that financial institutions use two-factor authentication in online transactions.

The industry is also heading towards physical/logical identity convergence. Administering physical and logical identity and access management under one unified policy has many benefits–it increases security, reduces redundancies and creates complete audit trails. However, there have been many barriers to adoption, such as the varying approaches to security taken by facilities operators and IT security staff and the fact that physical security products have been slow to become IP-enabled.

Yet, as companies move to meet compliance regulations that mandate strict access control processes, and as IP-based security products become the norm, more companies will begin unifying physical and logical identity management.


About the AVISIAN Publishing Expert Panel At the close of each year, AVISIAN Publishing’s editorial team selects a group of key leaders from various sectors of the ID technology market to serve as Expert Panelists. Each individual is asked to share their unique insight into what lies ahead. During the month of December, these panelist’s predictions are published daily at the appropriate title within the AVISIAN suite of ID technology publications: SecureIDNews.com, ContactlessNews.com, CR80News.com, RFIDNews.org, FIPS201.com, NFCNews.com, ThirdFactor.com, and DigitalIDNews.com.

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Oracle has released a new version of Oracle Retail Point-of-Service that aims to increase security, operational efficiency and functionality in part by integrating biometrics.

Oracle partnered with DigitalPersonal to add integrated biometrics to the POS package. Users of the software will login using their fingerprint, which will replace the need for PINs or passwords. This feature intends to reduce fraud by eliminating the possibility of unauthorized employees using a manager ID or swipe card to access the POS and approve overrides.

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The U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) is looking for proposals for research projects that could yield new biometric systems that authenticate users based on their own unique movements or behaviors such as the way they type or move a mouse, according to a ZDNet article.

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Online identity protection provider Yubico and cloud server security provider CloudPassage have teamed up to provide authentication services for administrative network access in the cloud.

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A Japanese researcher has developed a biometric that could be used to protect a car from theft: butt biometrics, according to verge.com.

Shigeomi Koshimizu, an associate professor at the Advanced Institute of Industrial Technology in Tokyo has developed the technology. A seat pressure map to generates 39 indices that are used to uniquely identify a subject’s posterior. Results so far have been encouraging, with average false reject rates of 2.2% and false accept rates of 1.1%.

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DigitalPersona released a new version of its Pro Enterprise authentication device. It now contains the ability to support a number of new authentication credentials, enabling organizations to mix and match the ways in which employees securely identify themselves to Microsoft Windows and other applications.

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Authentication and access provider DigitalPersona released the results of a survey that found more than half of retailers rely on passwords for point-of-sale system login in, even though they also have great concerns over passwords being shared and misused.

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