Full of promise but long
constrained by a diverse set of obstacles, biometrics -- or the use of
body or physical characteristics for secure authentication and
identification -- has not yet lived up to the hype.
Yet, lest we let 2007 slip by without the required declaration, let
it be know that, indeed, this may well be the year biometrics takes
hold on a broader scale, particularly its uses in security
applications.
"This really is the year of biometrics," Walter Hamilton, chairman
of the International Biometric Industry Association, told
TechNewsWorld. "There's a lot of activity going on, and the market is
beginning to see some widespread adoption
that will actually touch consumers."
Retail Applications
For example, technology from Pay By Touch
is being used in retail grocery chain Piggly Wiggly to allow customers
to pay by simply providing their phone number and touching their finger
to a fingerprint sensor. If the two match, it will automatically
perform a transfer of funds to the merchant's account using electronic
check clearing.
The result? For the merchant, fewer fees to pay on credit and debit
transactions, less need for managing cash and faster checkout lines.
For the customer, quicker checkout, the ability to shop wallet- and
PIN-free and what Hamilton calls "the benefit of anonymity," which
reduces the chances of identity theft
by virtue of the fact that shoppers no longer have to present a card.
Three million customers have registered for the program, Hamilton
said. "There are a lot of advantages. The primary ones are efficiencies
of cost for the merchant and convenience for the consumer."
Widely Varying Attitudes
"Biometrics is a very sexy technology," Ant Allan, research vice president for Gartner Group (NYSE: IT)
,
told TechNewsWorld. "The challenge is having a workable, cost-effective
system. The opportunity cost can be high, because money could always be
spent on other, more proven technologies."
Allan is skeptical that retail point-of-sale systems like Pay By
Touch will achieve widespread adoption in the near future, largely
because of consumer attitudes.
"Stores are thinking it makes customers move through faster, but the
value proposition for customers is different, and not as convincing,"
Allan explained. "The bottom line is, does it really enhance the
customer experience enough to make them bother with it? Most folks are
probably thinking, 'I'm perfectly happy doing it the way I already
do.'"
Cultural Differences
Interestingly, those consumer attitudes toward biometric technology
seem to be very culturally based, with acceptance rates much higher in
some countries than in others.
"There are more than 30 million users out there using our
technology, but about half of those are outside the United States,"
George Skaff, vice president of marketing for biometric vendor DigitalPersona,
told TechNewsWorld. "In places like Latin America, Europe and Africa,
people don't have this notion of Big Brother watching" that Americans
sometimes do, he said. "It's just a convenience."
DigitalPersona provides fingerprint technology for user
authentication, and the technology is increasingly being built into
notebook computers from Lenovo, Fujitsu
, Toshiba
and others. This is one of the fastest areas of uptake DigitalPersona
sees, Skaff noted, because "fingerprint authentication is the most
convenient way to replace a password for logging into computers,
networks or Web sites."
Security Concerns
One thing users who are nervous about using fingerprint technology
often don't realize, he pointed out, is that once their fingerprint is
scanned for use in such security applications, it is not saved. "We
don't keep the fingerprint image -- just the data, which we use to
construct an algorithm."
There was also an early trend, Skaff explained, in which notebook
manufacturers got "too enthusiastic" about what they could let users do
with fingerprint technology, with the result that users got overwhelmed
and confused. "In our current discussions, we're trying to figure out
which are the right applications to use the fingerprint readers," he
said.
Unlike DigitalPersona's use of fingerprint scans, the U.S.
government now uses them in such a way that fingerprint images are
saved. Specifically, the Department of Homeland Security
now requires that foreign visitors to the United States who arrive via
air or sea have their fingerprints scanned for national security
purposes, and when that is done, the fingerprint image is saved, Skaff
said.
Uses in Banking
Another consumer-facing application of biometrics currently in use
today is in banking, as a replacement for PINs and ATM cards. In Korea,
a number of banks are using fingerprints for these technologies,
whereas in Japan, vein patterns seem to be preferred, Gartner's Allan
said.
Fingerprint sensors can be fooled, he explained -- at least
theoretically in test situations -- but it's near impossible to
replicate the pattern of veins in an individual's hand. In addition,
vein readers are noncontact -- that is, they work without requiring
that the user touch them -- which is particularly attractive in a
country like Japan, Allan noted, where cultural attitudes often make
people averse to touching things that have already been touched by
others.
Other consumer uses of biometrics include biometrically enabled
smartphones that serve as electronic wallets, smart door locks that
require the right fingerprint before they'll open and turnstyles at
Walt Disney parks, Hamilton added, which now link tickets with
ticketholders' fingerprints to prevent fraud such as sharing of tickets.
In Nigeria, voters in this spring's elections will be required to
verify their identity by using their fingerprint. In preparation, some
10 million citizens are now having their fingerprints scanned,
according to Skaff.
In the Enterprise
Enterprises are also increasingly making use of biometric
technologies internally, particularly for access control. While Gartner
currently estimates adoption is less than 20 percent of corporations
worldwide, it predicts that in two to three years, that will increase
closer to one third. Smart cards and one-time passwords, meanwhile,
will reach about 50 percent adoption, Allan said.
One example on the enterprise side is the use of voice recognition
for automatic telephone-based password reset systems, allowing
corporate users to reset computer passwords without having to involve
help desk
staff.
Sensitivity of the voice recognition can be tuned, Allan noted, so
that it minimizes user frustration while allowing the majority of calls
to be handled automatically. For instances where the software can't
match the voice with the user, the call can automatically get forwarded
to a live help desk staffer. "It's easier for the user, and for the
company," Allan said. "It's a natural fit."
In the government, a personal identity verification system is
currently being implemented that will require all federal workers and
contractors who require unescorted access to present a smartcard with a
chip on it that includes two fingerprints, Hamilton said. Once it's in
place, he estimates it will touch 6 million military staff and
civilians.
One Last Caution
It's a diverse area in which a number of widely varying vendors and
technologies are all grouped under the umbrella term "biometrics," and
a frequent mistake is to assume they all involve similar pros and cons,
Allan warned.
"This is often one of the things that really misleads some
organizations," he explained. "They see the successful use of
biometrics in one application, and believe it should apply to another.
We see organizations invest in one area because of a success in a
noncomparable application, when in fact the same success criteria often
don't apply."
Nevertheless, "the market is definitely picking up," Hamilton said.
"As the government implements more programs, people will become more
comfortable and familiar with biometrics. It's a pretty exciting time."