News and insight into biometric identification and authentication

Biometric solutions for physical access control

Thursday, January 27, 2011

Leveraging palm vein authentication technology to deliver security

The demand for secure authentication and access control solutions has never been greater and today, biometric technologies are raising the security bar. Biometric solutions leverage a person’s unique physical characteristics–including fingerprint, iris or palm vein pattern–to verify identity and grant physical access.

The most common applications include security for doors, computers with confidential information and high-level networks. Superior to most conventional methods–such as keypads–biometric access control delivers security, efficiency and user friendliness, making it a new standard in the health care, financial services, the military and public safety.


Vantage Data Centers is an example of an organization benefiting from new biometric solutions. The company provides energy-efficient, scalable, wholesale data center solutions to enterprise customers. Due to the extremely sensitive data and expensive infrastructures stored at its locations, security represents a primary concern for customers and key objective for Vantage.

Recently, Vantage deployed the Fujitsu PalmSecure biometric access control system at its Santa Clara, Calif. campus to protect proprietary information and infrastructure.The PalmSecure system delivers accurate biometric identification and access control, ensuring that only privileged personnel have access to secure areas.

The PalmSecure sensor uses near-infrared light to capture a person’s unique biometric palm vein pattern, the scan is then matched against pre-registered users’ palm vein templates to determine access. The solution offers up to three authentication factors, as well as the ability to add an alternate authentication factor by registering a user’s second hand. As a result, Vantage can require biometric authentication for all ingress points and layer additional authentication factors as needed, specifically in mission-critical areas.

“For example, a customer needing to enter the front door to the building would do so via biometric authentication,” says Jim Trout, CEO of Vantage Data Centers. “The same customer needing access to a mission-critical area would biometrically authenticate and then provide up to two more factors of authentication, including key-pad code and/or smart card. This comprehensive, multi-factor application allows us to meet customer security demands and support various compliance regulations.”

Further the Fujitsu PalmSecure technology utilizes contactless, non-traceable and non-shareable biometric technology that leaves no biometric footprint behind and is virtually impossible to forge and is not affected by the presence of hand lotions, chemicals, abrasions, skin conditions or the environment, The result is a hygienic systems that delivers security for information assets, secure areas and facilities.

“The Fujitsu PalmSecure solution addresses challenges of accuracy, enrollment difficulty and residual trace issues head on, providing a proven biometric authentication solution for access management that is highly accurate, easy to enroll and contactless,” says Trout.


About the AVISIAN Publishing Expert Panel

At the close of each year, AVISIAN Publishing’s editorial team selects a group of key leaders from various sectors of the ID technology market to serve as Expert Panelists. Each individual is asked to share their unique insight into what lies ahead. During the month of December, these panelist’s predictions are published daily at the appropriate title within the AVISIAN suite of ID technology publications: SecureIDNews, ContactlessNews, CR80News, NFCNews, DigitalIDNews, ThirdFactor, RFIDNews, EnterpriseIDNews, FinancialIDNews, GovernmentIDNews, HealthIDNews, FIPS201.com, IDNoticias es. [end] 

The Colorado Bureau of Investigation (CBI) announced that it intends to replace its Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS), reports the La Junta Tribune Democrat.

The 20-year old system contains almost 2.7 million master fingerprint records and is one of the oldest statewide law enforcement agency systems in the U.S. and can no longer keep up with demand. The system was designed to process 700 fingerprint cards in a 24 hour period, but today 1,000 to 1,500 fingerprint cards are put through the system.

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The introduction of biometric multimodal fusion has helped lead to greater accuracy in biometric authentication, but its adoption rate is still overall fairly low, reports ZDNet Asia.

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Vision-Box, a biometrics solutions provider, has come out with an automatic border control e-gate that supports multimodal biometric authentication.

This new e-gate is a thin system that contains vb i-match, a single sourced design that is modular and flexible and can be adapted to business requirements and infrastructure constraints that would otherwise disrupt passenger flow. It has the ability to cope with industry standards such as ICAO. The e-gate supports iris, fingerprint and facial biometrics.

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M2SYS Technology has released an Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) that enables the storage, search, retrieval, processing and editing of biometric data and subject records. The new system is built on multi-modal architecture, enabling users to combine the biometric matching of a fingerprint with that of an iris, face or palm print.

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Ackthpt Permalink
January 27, 2011 4:51 PM

Didn't MythBusters fool a biometric door security system with 10$ worth of everyday supplies?

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