Biometric security devices — which authenticate a person’s identity on the basis of physical characteristics, such as a fingerprint — have been available in one form or another for 30 years. But ...
In an era where digital security is more important than ever, the need for secure and reliable authentication methods continues to grow. Traditional biometrics, such as fingerprints, facial ...
Although it wasn't called biometrics at the time, a rudimentary form of the technology emerged in 1901 when Scotland Yard adopted fingerprint classification to identify criminal suspects. The ...
A Hong Kong bank recently fell victim to an impersonation scam in which a bank employee was tricked into transferring $25.6 million to thieves after a video call with the bank CFO and other colleagues ...
While biometric access control may be more commonly implemented in government facilities and high-end applications, the reality is that in addition to these traditional users, many more adopters are ...
Using two biometric signals increases spoofing resistance. Facial authentication and iris recognition combined drops the ...
Effective IT security is in high demand, and a large variety of industries such as banking, government, education, health care and the military view biometrics solutions as a key part of the solution.
Trust Stamp has announced a significant advancement in biometric security, with the U.S. Patent and Trademark Office granting a patent for its "Shape Overlay for Proof of Liveness" technology. This ...
Armatura One natively integrates with braXos for multi-credential floor access and destination dispatch in commercial, ...
RECENT YEARS have seen a boom in biometric security systems—identification measures based on a person’s individual biology—from unlocking smartphones, to automating border controls. As this technology ...
Sen. Elizabeth Warren, Sen. Ed Markey and Rep. Ayanna Pressley recently introduced legislation that would ban government agencies from using facial recognition technology, claiming that it ...
The results are in. And as it turns out, despite the naysayers, Americans are happy about the use of biometric security measures at airports. The U.S. Travel Association, in conjunction with Ipsos, ...