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19 October 2007
Biometrics 2007: Fingerprints fail to tackle football ‘hooligans’

Out of play: fingerprints failed to stop a fifth of
black-listed volunteers entering stadia
A fingerprint recognition system failed to prevent black-listed
fans from entering football grounds and was easily fooled by simple
spoofing techniques, according to a trial by Dutch research organisation
TNO.
Jurgen den Hartog, who undertook the research, said that with a
false accusation rate of 0.1% – a low rate being a requirement
for such a system, given the volume of supporters and the fact that
false accusations could spark trouble – the fingerprint system
failed to spot 15% to 20% of those on a volunteer black-list, recruited
to test the technology, a level he described as “unexpected”.
“This has serious implications for a lot of other negative
identification scenarios,” den Hartog told a session of the
Biometrics 2007 conference in London on 18 October. “It’s
very easy not to look like yourself, so I wonder what the impact
of these results will be on other programmes.”
Negative identification fails if a black-listed person can fool
the system into thinking they are not on that list, involving technically
challenging one-to-many checks. Identity verification checks, such
as with passports, require only a one-to-one check that the biometric
recorded matches the individual, and fails only if someone else’s
identity is hijacked.
Den Hartog said that fooling the fingerprint systems, LScan 100
scanners provided by NEC and HSB, proved easy for the volunteers,
who were asked to attempt such spoofing. They used techniques including
latent fingerprints on sticky tape and a layer of glue on fingers:
“The trick is, do not press too hard,” he said of the
latter. Both techniques also fooled a spoof-resistant scanner from
Lumidigm in TNO’s labs.
Furthermore, the tests brought up other problems: the devices could
check 12 fans a minute at best, but as few as four or five a minute
on one occasion when it was in direct sunlight by Feyenoord’s
ground. “The french fries stand outside the stadium couldn’t
do business any more, because of the queue for our gate,”
den Hartog said.
“The live system did not meet important requirements of speed,
accuracy and robustness against manipulation,” den Hartog
concluded. “I think speed and accuracy can be solved, but
robustness against manipulation really remains a challenge.”
The research involved 6400 checks at 26 matches at three Dutch
football clubs. TNO chose fingerprints in preference to iris or
facial recognition, on a range of criteria including speed, reliability
and proof against being fooled.
Biometrics move
from banking to borders (24 August 2007)
New biometrics
see right through you (January/February 2007 issue)
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