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Entrepreneur November 2006 Amanda C. Kooser |
Identify Yourself How will increasingly sophisticated biometric technologies affect you? |
U.S. Banker December 2001 Mark Bruno |
Biometrics' Day Has Come Demand for biometrics security technology appears to be rising as a result of the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon. If production actually does pick up, prices could decline and banks could become major buyers... |
Wall Street & Technology April 18, 2008 Melanie Rodier |
Financial Institutions Evaluate Biometrics While financial institutions aren't yet ready for consumer-facing biometrics deployments, these technologies are gaining popularity for behind-the-scenes authentication. |
U.S. Banker January 2004 Karen Krebsbach |
Biometrics Takes Hold Overseas, But Not in U.S. U.S. banks, tied to legacy systems, are reluctant to start over with what many consider untested technology. Then there's the real bugaboo: privacy. |
National Defense November 2007 Stew Magnuson |
U.S. Government Driving The Advance of Biometric Technologies Technology companies are rapidly developing biometric devices. But privacy policies, the tech backbone to effectively connect the scanners, and a market beyond the U.S. government, are lagging. |
T.H.E. Journal September 2003 Laurence Goldberg |
Creating Safer and More Efficient Schools With Biometric Technologies While technology cannot provide a panacea for all school security concerns -- particularly those related to internal threats -- it can be used to enhance security, access control and communications within schools |
National Defense January 2009 Myra S. Gray |
Defense Dept. 'Institutionalizing' Use of Biometrics Biometrics use crosses all services. The Army is using biometrics to assist in identifying detainees in war zones |
New Architect June 2002 Jerri L. Ledford |
The Rolls Royce of Security Are biometrics worth the expense? |
CIO May 15, 2003 Juan Carlos Perez |
Reality Unlike TV Biometrics -- the use of IT to identify people using fingerprints, voice, face and hand geometry -- has its limitations. The applications aren't 100 percent accurate, for starters. And technology standards and concerns about privacy also are potential limitations. But it is improving. |
Wall Street & Technology March 26, 2004 Jim Middlemiss |
Biometrics Add Security in Insecure Times Technologies like voice-recognition and fingerprint authentication can add a layer of security while improving customer service and cutting costs. |
Mother Jones Jan/Feb 2002 Brendan I. Koerner |
Up Close and Personal High-tech identification devices could produce reams of data on law-abiding citizens -- but may be useless in fighting terrorists... |
CFO October 15, 2002 Russ Banham |
The Eyes Have It Concerned about security, companies may soon rely on a wide range of biometrics. Turns out you're even more special than you thought. |
Bank Technology News September 2001 Maria Bruno |
Biometrics Are Too Hot to Handle Despite high hopes, bankers are still all talk when it comes to identification technology... |
CIO May 15, 2003 Scott Berinato |
What's In a Face? Part of the reason biometrics remains a niche field is because the still-improving technology has been oversold. |
Registered Rep. October 31, 2013 Lauren Barack |
Guided by Voices Vanguard, Barclays and Schwab are just three financial services firms confirmed to be using biometrics today -- at least in the early stages. |
T.H.E. Journal October 1, 2009 John K. Waters |
Reading Between the Lines While Microsoft's Kim Cameron, BanTheScan.com, and others debate the pros and cons of biometric scanning in American schools, a school in Scotland has been testdriving a new system that could mitigate many of the concerns that surround the technology. |
National Defense January 2009 Stew Magnuson |
Defense Department Under Pressure to Share Biometric Data Within minutes of knocking down the door of a suspected bomb maker in Iraq, U.S. troops can fingerprint everyone they find inside, send the scans across a satellite link, and find out if the subjects are suspected terrorists. |
U.S. Banker June 2002 |
Biometrics Comes to Life Biometrics have entered the mainstream consumer market. Finally. |
IEEE Spectrum May 2011 Joshua J. Romero |
Fast Start for World's Biggest Biometrics ID Project In India, a few million people have been registered for a biometric database so far - only a billion left to go. |
PC Magazine June 25, 2003 Sebastian Rupley |
It's You Identifying people through biometrics -- from fingerprints to iris scans -- is a hot topic in a security-conscious world. Datastrip has a new spin on simplifying the process, with the Datastrip DSVerify2D portable scanner. |
National Defense November 2007 Stew Magnuson |
Military Identity Technology Leaps Ahead of Policies To help fight the Iraqi insurgency, the Defense Department has pushed biometric collection technologies into the field. But policies on how best to use them are not fully developed. |
Bank Technology News January 2002 Maria Bruno |
Citi's Biometrics Tease Yet another banking giant's quest for the ultimate in security... |
Bank Systems & Technology June 24, 2008 Paula Damiano |
Biometrics: The End of Authentication as We Know It? Biometrics -- the science of identifying individuals by their unique physical traits -- always has been cutting-edge technology. But practical for the banking industry? Not so much. |
Information Today September 19, 2013 |
Precise Biometrics Builds Ecosystem for Mobile Device Security Precise Biometrics recently integrated its Tactivo products with a global ecosystem of technology partners that create authentication applications. |
Bank Systems & Technology February 27, 2006 Maria Bruno-Britz |
Back to the Future Banks are beginning to realize that biometrics offer a viable solution in today's security- and compliance-conscious environment, according to a new report. |
CRM October 2013 Leonard Klie |
Voice Biometrics Builds a Business Case Advances in speech security have made it more feasible and reliable as a call center tool. |
PC Magazine January 20, 2004 Brett Glass |
Biometric Security Someday biometric systems may play an important role in securing all kinds of systems, but they're not foolproof yet. |
Wall Street & Technology June 19, 2008 Cory Levine |
Stopping ID Theft With Biometrics Accenture recommends the use of biometric solutions -- specifically, fingerprint readers -- to prevent identity theft. |
National Defense April 2010 Stew Magnuson |
Face, Iris and Fingerprint Biometrics Good Enough for Now, Says White House Staffer Federal agencies that collect biometric data to screen individuals should concentrate their efforts on fingerprints, faces and irises, and perfect the collection of those technologies first. |
Bank Technology News July 2005 Glen Fest |
Cards: Biometrics Stalled Amid The Hype Shortfalls in fingerprint technology are curbing widespread adoption of biometric-based payment systems. However, a handful of small projects are moving forward, thanks to the technology's buzz. |
National Defense September 2011 Grace V. Jean |
Here's Looking At You: Iris Recognition on the Move Unlike fingerprints and other biometrics, the iris remains largely immutable to physical changes caused by normal aging processes and environmental factors. |
Bank Technology News August 2008 Michael Sisk |
Yin and Yang? Mobile Banking and Voice Biometrics Voice Commerce Group unveiled a system it says will enable the widespread adoption of biometrics-based "voice signatures" by the global payments and financial services industry. |
Bank Technology News September 2010 Rebecca Sausner |
The Eyes Have It Jeff Carter is now Chief Business Development and Strategy Officer at Global Rainmakers, a New York-based biometric firm that is convinced its high-speed, low-cost iris scan technology will be everywhere a decade from now. |
IEEE Spectrum January 2006 Erico Guizzo |
Loser: Britain's Identity Crisis Proposed biometric ID cards won't prevent fraud or terrorism |
CRM December 2011 Leonard Klie |
Can Voice Biometrics Hack Computer Security? Speech technology can protect customer data against small-scale attacks. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2012 Eliza Strickland |
The Biometric Wallet Palm vein scanners could eventually replace your wallet with your hand |
National Defense December 2010 Stew Magnuson |
Underlying Science Behind Biometrics Requires More Rigor, Report Says The biometrics industry has seen rapid growth in the post-9/11 world with numerous companies touting products that they say can confirm a subject's identity based on his physical or behavioral characteristics with reasonable accuracy. |
IEEE Spectrum July 2006 Jain & Pankanti |
A Touch of Money Biometric authentication systems for credit cards could put identity thieves out of business. Here's how it would work. |
Entrepreneur March 2005 Amanda C. Kooser |
Touch and Go Fingerprint readers mean better security--and no more tricky passwords. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics November 2004 |
Lockheed Martin to Build Fingerprint I.D. System for DOD This new system will be patterned after the Integrated Automated Fingerprint Identification System (IAFIS). The contract was awarded as a task order under the U.S. Army's Information Technology Enterprise Solutions (ITES) contracting vehicle. |
CIO July 1, 2002 Michael Goldberg |
Does Biometrics Work? We'll Soon Find Out NIST is slated to tell Congress in October which biometrics products, if any, work as advertised. |
National Defense January 2009 Sandra I. Erwin |
Government Reports Depict Alternate Realities Federal agency reports can be notoriously oblivious to facts. |
BusinessWeek August 8, 2005 |
Big Brother Britain? The Blair Administration's proposal for biometric ID cards looked like a goner - until the July 7 attacks in London. But critics still worry about their intrusiveness. |
Military & Aerospace Electronics May 2005 John McHale |
DOD officials improve security at Scott AFB with biometric solution Officials of Scott Air Force Base, are using a hand-geometry system to improve base access through its Shiloh-Scott MetroLink rail station entrance. |
InternetNews December 7, 2005 Tim Gray |
Ridge: Terrorist Threats Spur Tech Former U.S. Secretary of Homeland Security and Governor of Pennsylvania Tom Ridge said today ongoing terrorist threats would continue to drive science and technology innovation in the United States and in the process make a better and stronger country. |
BusinessWeek August 8, 2005 |
Surveillance Society: The Experts Speak Excerpts from those conversations with privacy and security experts about how much security monitoring is necessary and what can be done to prevent abuses. |