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About
Biometrics

Biometrics
are automated methods of recognizing a person based on a physiological
or behavioral characteristic. Biometric technologies are becoming
the foundation of an extensive array of highly secure identification
and personal verification solutions.
Biometrics
is expected to be incorporated in solutions to provide for Homeland
Security including applications for improving airport security,
strengthening our national borders, in travel documents, visas and
in preventing ID theft. Now, more than ever, there is a wide
range of interest in biometrics across federal, state, and local
governments. Congressional offices and a large number of organizations
involved in many markets are addressing the important role that
biometrics will play in identifying and verifying the identity of
individuals and protecting national assets.
There
are many needs for biometrics beyond Homeland Security. Enterprise-wide
network security infrastructures, secure electronic banking, investing
and other financial transactions, retail sales, law enforcement,
and health and social services are already benefiting from these
technologies. A range of new applications can been found in
such diverse environments as amusement parks, banks, credit unions,
and other financial organizations, Enterprise and Government networks,
passport programs and driver licenses, colleges, physical access
to multiple facilities (e.g., nightclubs) and school lunch programs.
Biometric-based authentication applications include workstation,
network, and domain access, single sign-on, application logon, data
protection, remote access to resources, transaction security and
Web security. Trust in these electronic transactions is essential
to the healthy growth of the global economy. Utilized alone or integrated
with other technologies such as smart cards, encryption keys and
digital signatures, biometrics are set to pervade nearly all aspects
of the economy and our daily lives. Utilizing biometrics for personal
authentication is becoming convenient and considerably more accurate
than current methods (such as the utilization of passwords or PINs).
This is because biometrics links the event to a particular individual
(a password or token may be used by someone other than the authorized
user), is convenient (nothing to carry or remember), accurate (it
provides for positive authentication), can provide an audit trail
and is becoming socially acceptable and inexpensive.
A discussion on biometrics authentication and a brief summary of
different biometric technologies can be found in:
"Biometrics
Authentication Technology: From the Movies to Your Desktop"
(.pdf)
ITL Bulletin, May 2001, discusses biometric authentication and
outlines recent research and evaluation activities in industry,
government and academia. The bulletin summarizes biometric standards
activities and the role of NIST/ITL and the Biometric Consortium
in the development of these biometric standards: Biometrics-Technologies
for Highly Secure Personal Authentication
Copies of the bulletin can be requested from itlab@nist.gov.
More
information about biometrics, standards activities, government and
industry organizations and research initiatives on biometrics can
be found in the following web sites:
Biometric
Consortium web site
Connecticut
Department of Social Services - Biometrics ID Project web site
The
Netscape Open Directory - Biometrics
The
Biometrics Institute
These links go outside the NIST web space.
NIST is not responsible for the content of these sites. These links
may be broken, or the content may have been removed or altered.
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