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PC World
Are Biometrics Coming to a PC Near You?
March 19, 2004
By Adrienne Newell
WASHINGTON-- Science fiction often
depicts a future where retinal scans are common and
fingerprint scans replace passwords and even door keys. It
may be science fiction no longer: A government agency is
examining the possibility of applying biometrics to curb
identity theft.
A little-known provision of the
Fair and Accurate Credit Transaction Act of 2003 requires
the Department of the Treasury to examine the use of
biometric technology as a security tactic. The FACT Act's
primary mandate is that customers be notified when banks
send credit bureaus negative reports on them.
Identity theft is an
increasing problem, especially with the advent of
frequent computer use. Banks in particular are plagued,
partly because information such as Social Security
numbers, relatively inaccessible before, is now more
easily available online.
Under Examination
Under the FACT Act, the Department
of the Treasury is studying how biometric technology is now
being used to help stop identity theft. The agency also is
examining whether the private sector has enough incentive to
adopt biometrics as a security measure, and what the rate of
adoption is for biometric technology now.
The department will also consider
the potential benefits and drawbacks--including privacy
concerns--of biometric technologies for consumers.
"We're looking at the issue
with a very broad lens," says Anne Womack, a department
spokesperson. The 30-day period of public comment began
March 2 and ends April 1. After gathering data and comments,
the secretary of the Treasury must report to Congress by
midsummer on the feasibility and possibilities of biometrics
for security.
Identity Verification
Biometric identification works by
taking a physical trait--your face, fingerprint, or iris,
say--and converting it into a mathematical algorithm called
a template, according to Trevor Prout, marketing director
for the International Biometric Group.
The technology is used for things
such as allowing only authorized personnel access to a
secure area. Verifying your identity means you claim an
identity and then submit a biometric to verify that you are
the person you claim to be, Prout says.
"When you then go to verify
or be identified, you submit your biometric again, and it's
converted into a template [so the two can be]
compared," he says.
Though images of movies like
Gattaca, Mission: Impossible, and even Charlie's Angels bring
to mind retinal scans and voice recognition, the most common
use of biometrics is finger scan technology, Prout says.
"Iris recognition has a lot
of potential--it's arguably the most accurate--but it's not
as widely deployed," he says.
Iris recognition may be the most
accurate is because it incorporates many more data points
than, say, fingerprint recognition.
"The iris theoretically has
upwards of 250 unique data points, whereas with a single
flat fingerprint you're only talking about 50 or so,"
Prout says.
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