Guest Post: nVIAsoft on their biometric solution
Cybersecurity and Identity Access Management (IAM) market leaders are seeking new means of securing identities.
Cybersecurity and Identity Access Management (IAM) market leaders are seeking new means of securing identities.
Whilst there is no denying the fingerprint biometric smart card is reaching its inflection point, one barrier to mass market adoption is the cost of the sensors needed to take each person’s biometric fingerprint data.
When using real-time facial recognition to secure spaces, we are clearly touching on surveillance-related issues that could infringe on our privacy
The security of biometrics technology is in the spotlight and stakeholders must take a balanced view on its strengths and vulnerabilities, says Isabelle Moeller, Chief Executive, Biometrics Institute. As deployments proliferate, the technology’s credibility rests on the industry’s will to collaborate globally.
Only biometrics can unify the age-old opposing forces of user-experience and digital security, says Isabelle Moeller, Chief Executive, Biometrics Institute. When it happens, the effect will be remarkable.
While policy creation for the use of biometric technologies at national borders remains a matter for government, best practices and guiding principles for effective deployment can be built through collaboration between the industry’s global stakeholders, says Isabelle Moeller, Chief Executive of the Biometrics Institute.
Flexible fingerprint sensors can bring value and boost the implementation of fingerprint imaging technology in five key industries.
For voice biometrics to be trusted and ubiquitous, it must be unobtrusive, robust and secure.
Splashy headlines and erroneous news reports on biometrics make it harder for manufacturers and vendors to move the industry forward.
There are key challenges that need to be addressed to enable the use of fingerprint sensors in smartcards…