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24 August 2007
Biometrics move from banking to borders

Jim Wayman: Security and
fingerprinting are in the ascendant
Biometrics has changed in several significant ways over the last
decade, according to a prominent expert in the field.
Jim Wayman, director of the biometrics test centre at San Jose
state university in California, says that in 1997, the technology
was seen as having huge potential in retail banking; there was concern
over a lack of standards; and experts were expressing concern about
the lack of a scientific approach to testing biometrics. “All
that has changed,” says Wayman, with standards and tests having
developed quickly since.
Wayman will review the last decade in his opening keynote address
to the Biometrics 2007 conference and exhibition, held in London
on 17 to 19 October. The event is organised by Infosecurity’s
publisher, Elsevier.
He says that banking has largely disregarded biometrics, following
experiments earlier this decade. These included the UK’s Nationwide
building society, which tested an ATM cash machine which used iris-scanning.
“Everyone liked it, but Nationwide didn’t find a way
to make money off it. There hasn’t been a big push,”
says Wayman.
“What has happened, which we didn’t expect then, are
the national identity systems, the border-crossing systems,”
he adds, with the UK implementing both. But even in this field,
some technologies have fallen back: “We did have a US system
we were talking about, using hand geometry – that system has
gone.”
Wayman says this is indicative of another major shift, towards
use of fingerprint recognition technology, over the last decade.
Yet he says this biometric has been struggling to reach its potential
for far longer: automated fingerprint recognition systems first
appeared in the 1960s, along with hand-writing recognition.
“It was seen as the best biometric, if people could get past
the stigma” from its association with policing, he says. Even
now, its growth is linked closely to security, such as at borders.
Government tenders for
ID scheme supplier (14 August 2007)
Home Office to roll out
biometric technology to UK borders (31 July 2007)
Conference web-site
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