BIOMETRICS - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 32
About This Presentation
Title:

BIOMETRICS

Description:

Instead of using something you have (like a key) or something you know (like a ... technology, has inherent benefits and opportunities for misapplication or misuse ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:736
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 33
Provided by: Gre9228
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: BIOMETRICS


1
BIOMETRICS
  • Groups 21 22
  • OMIS 351

2
What is it?
  • Biometrics literally means life-measure
  • Instead of using something you have (like a key)
    or something you know (like a password),
    biometrics uses who you are to identify you.

3
What do biometrics measure?
  • Physical Characteristics
  • Face
  • Fingerprints
  • Iris
  • Veins
  • Behavioral Characteristics
  • Voice
  • Handwriting
  • Typing Rhythm
  • Gait (walking stride)

4
  • Biometric systems can seem complicated, but they
    all use the same three steps
  • 1. Enrollment The first time you use a biometric
    system, it records basic information about you,
    like your name or an identification number. It
    then captures an image or recording of your
    specific trait.
  • 2. Storage Contrary to what you may see in
    movies, most systems don't store the complete
    image or recording. They instead analyze your
    trait and translate it into a code or graph. Some
    systems also record this data onto a smart card
    that you carry with you.
  • 3. Comparison The next time you use the system,
    it compares the trait you present to the
    information on file. Then, it either accepts or
    rejects that you are who you claim to be.

5
Biometrics for Dummies
6
Dispelling Some Common Myths
  • Movies and television shows often depict
    biometrics in a way that is fun to watch, but not
    accurate.
  • For example, you may see a whole fingerprint
    compared to other whole fingerprints until a
    computer finds a match. This method would be slow
    and difficult.
  • Instead of comparing actual pictures, biometric
    systems use various algorithms to analyze and
    encode information about the trait. This
    information takes up only a few bits of space.

7
Common Myths
  • Isnt forging a signature relatively easy?
  • No, because handwriting biometric systems measure
    the rhythm and pressure not the end result.

This Tablet PC has a signature verification system
8
Determining Accuracy
  • All biometric systems use human traits that are,
    to some degree, unique.
  • Which system is best depends on the desired level
    of security.
  • Most manufacturers use measurements like these to
    describe accuracy
  • False Accept Rate (FAR) How many imposters the
    system accepts
  • False Reject Rate (FRR) How many authorized
    users the system rejects
  • Failure to Enroll Rate (FTE) How many people's
    traits are of insufficient quality for the system
    to use
  • Failure to Acquire Rate (FTA) How many times a
    user must present the trait before the system
    correctly accepts or rejects them

9
Authenticate vs. Identify
  • A biometric system can either authenticate that
    you are who you say you are, or it can identify
    you by comparing your information to all of the
    information on file.
  • Authentication is a one-to-one comparison it
    compares your characteristic with your stored
    information.
  • Identification, on the other hand, is a
    one-to-many comparison.

10
Fingerprint Biometric
  • One of the most common biometric systems due to
  • Affordability
  • Uniqueness of Trait

11
Fingerprint Biometric
  • Also less reliable
  • While fingerprints are certainly unique, ease of
    duplication increases risk of compromise.

12
Facial Recognition
  • Points and Distances measured
  • Extremely Accurate
  • Extremely Expensive
  • More useful as 1-to-1 authentication, as
    1-to-many ID can slow system processor
  • US Government, Casinos, other High-Risk

13
Hand and Finger Geometry
  • People's hands and fingers are unique -- but not
    as unique as other traits, like fingerprints or
    irises.
  • So, businesses and schools, rather than
    high-security facilities, typically use hand and
    finger geometry readers to authenticate users,
    not to identify them.

14
Hand and Finger Geometry
  • Disney theme parks, for example, use finger
    geometry readers to grant ticket holders
    admittance to different parts of the park. Some
    businesses use hand geometry readers in place of
    timecards.
  • Users also feel it is less invasive

15
Iris Scanning
  • Although it seems futuristic, the process is
    quite simple.
  • Digital Camera locates
  • The center of the pupil
  • The edge of the pupil
  • The edge of the iris
  • The eyelids and eyelashes

16
Iris Scanning
  • Analysis is put into code
  • Frequently used in high security applications
  • Chance of mistaking one iris code for another is
    1 in 1078
  • (1 in 10000000000000000000000000000000000000000000
    00000000!)

17
Iris Scanning
  • Other Advantages
  • A persons iris generally does not change over
    time
  • Cost-Benefit Analysis
  • Blind users are able to use

18
Gait and Vein Structure
  • Both Gait and Vein Structure biometrics are
    cutting-edge and making advances
  • Gait biometrics is the measure of ones stride,
    as no two people walk the same way.
  • Still being perfected, but is useful in
    surveillance and observation (airports, terrorist
    detection, etc)

19
Vein Structure
  • Vein Structure biometrics use infrared technology
    to analyze vein patterns in the hand.
  • Perhaps the most unique biometric
  • Certainly the most expensive system

20
How Reliable are all the Different Biometrics?
21
The Future of Biometrics
  • Biometrics can do a lot more than just determine
    whether someone has access to walk through a
    particular door
  • Hospitals make sure the right baby goes home
    with the right mother
  • Personal use the best deterrent to the Identity
    Theft crisis, backup of vital documents like
    Birth Certificate, Social Security, etc.
  • Immigration Work Visas for immigrants, which
    could significantly help the illegal immigration
    problem
  • Replacement for Passports and other international
    documents vital to security.

22
The Future of Biometrics
  • Current use by biometric type

23
The Future of Biometrics
  • The US Government has dramatically increased
    contracts and expenditures on biometric
    implementation and research

24
  • The Department of Defense recently replaced US
    Military IDs with Smart Cards
  • Stores vital information like blood type, SSN, etc

25
The Future of Biometrics
  • Leading the Way
  • Health Care
  • Transportation (aviation)
  • Government
  • Federal, State Local

26
  • "Biometrics is just starting to explode," said
    Dee Gustowarow, manager of the access control
    solutions division at EDS, which for 10 years has
    provided biometrics services.
  • International Biometric Group LLC, a consulting
    and integration services firm, estimates that the
    annual market for biometric technologies will
    grow from 1.2 billion this year to more than
    4.6 billion in 2008.

Total Biometric Spending in Recent Years
27
Growth
  • Biometric technologys stage today bears a
    striking resemblance to the Internet in the early
    1990s
  • New Business Opportunities/Job Creation
  • High Investment Potential (one of the few
    biometric companies today could be the Microsoft
    opportunity of 1988)
  • A limitless industry in terms of innovation
    capacity
  • Industry should stabilize at maturity many years
    from now as opposed to crash-and-burn

28
Biometric Opposition
  • Privacy Advocates
  • Many people imagine a world in which cameras
    identify and track them as they walk down the
    street, following their activities and buying
    patterns without their consent.
  • People may also wonder whether a huge database
    will exist somewhere that contains vital
    information about everyone in the world, and
    whether that information would be safe there.

29
Biometric Privacy
  • Privacy concerns are not without merit
  • At this point, however, biometric systems don't
    have the capability to store and catalog
    information about everyone in the world. Most
    store a minimal amount of information about a
    relatively small number of users
  • The information in one system isn't necessarily
    compatible with others, although several
    organizations are trying to standardize biometric
    data.

30
Other Concerns
  • In addition to the potential for invasions of
    privacy, critics raise several concerns about
    biometrics, such as
  • Over reliance The perception that biometric
    systems are foolproof might lead people to forget
    about daily, common-sense security practices and
    to protect the system's data.
  • Accessibility Some systems can't be adapted for
    certain populations, like elderly people or
    people with disabilities.
  • Interoperability In emergency situations,
    agencies using different systems may need to
    share data, and delays can result if the systems
    can't communicate with each other.

31
Other Concerns
  • Advocates opposing biometrics have much in common
    with other technology opponents
  • Wiretaps are equally controversial
  • Many called the internet into question at its
    inception, but even with little government
    regulation, most fears proven false

32
Conclusions
  • Biometrics, like any other emerging technology,
    has inherent benefits and opportunities for
    misapplication or misuse
  • Biometrics is an emerging technology that should
    continue its rapid growth for many years
  • The potential problems with biometrics is not
    with the technology itself, but with those who
    administer it.
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com