 |
Biometrics are technologies that automatically confirm
the identity of people by comparing patterns of physical
or behavioral characteristics in real time against enrolled
computer records of those patterns. Leading biometric
technologies accomplish this task by scanning patterns
of the face, fingerprint, hand, iris, palm, signature,
skin, or voice.
Biometrics is far superior to other common means of
confirming identity, such as tokens or passwords. Tokens
and passwords cannot ensure positive identification
of a person. Tokens are routinely counterfeited and
stolen. Passwords are routinely forgotten, left in plain
sight, and stolen. Unlike tokens or passwords, biometric
identifiers are inextricably linked to persons themselves
and therefore cannot be forgotten, counterfeited, or
stolen.
Biometrics help protect privacy by erecting a barrier
between personal data and unauthorized access. Technically,
biometric capture devices create electronic digital
templates that are encrypted and stored and then compared
to encrypted templates derived from "live"
images in order to confirm the identity of a person.
The templates are generated from complex and proprietary
algorithms and are then encrypted using strong cryptographic
algorithms to secure and protect them from disclosure.
Thus, standing alone, biometric templates cannot be
reconstructed, decrypted, reverse-engineered, or otherwise
manipulated to reveal a person's identity. In short,
biometrics can be thought of as a very secure key: Unless
a biometric gate is unlocked by using the right key,
no one can gain access to a person's identity.
|