News and insight into biometric identification and authentication

NIST adds new biometric mode standards

Thursday, December 8, 2011

The National Institute for Standards and Technology published a revised biometric standard that expands the type and amount of information that forensic scientists can share across their international networks to identify victims or solve crimes. Biometric data is a digital or analog representation of physical attributes that can be used to uniquely identify us.

The new standard is the Data Format for the Interchange of Fingerprint, Facial & Other Biometric Information and is referenced as “ANSI/NIST-ITL 1-2011, NIST Special Publication 500-290.” The revised standards replace ones already in use by the U.S. and many other countries as a way to format and set a universal language for sharing biometric data as well as the information regarding how it was collected or specific characteristics in the data itself.


In addition to updating language, NIST added DNA and footprints to the standard as a type of collected biometric mode, which marks first standard set for the transfer of DNA data. Beyond this the new standard focuses on fingerprint, palm print and footprint data where it sets specific terminology for references and procedures in describing the details of collected samples.

Other new aspects include describing how to set geographic GPS points of where biometrics were collected, sending pictures, audio and video clips of crimes scene, maintaining data logs for keeping an audit trail of access to the data and the steps required for matching the collected sample. NIST officials are already working on a new version that would also include voice biometrics, traumatic injury imaging and analysis, dental forensics and conformance testing. [end] 

DigitalPersona Inc. released a new version of its DigitalPersona Pro Enterprise software that includes facial recognition as a method for authentication.

Facial recognition can now be combined with fingerprint biometrics, passwords, PINs, proximity cards, smart cards and OATH tokens for a multi-factor authentication solution. Policy creation and enforcement works through a client’s existing Active Directory infrastructure.

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The National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) has developed and published a new protocol for devices to capture biometric data wirelessly and securely using Web services.

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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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The Hong Kong Police Force (HKPF) has awarded a 10-year contract to 3M Cogent to provide high-resolution LiveScan booking systems and biometric identification products, using tenprint and palm print scans in accordance with the HKPF’s ANSI/NIST standard.

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