At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas earlier this month, Fujitsu showed off a new idea in security-minded technology that the Japanese company argues could make the fingerprint an obsolete symbol of personal data: vein-pattern recognition.
Put your hand over a computer’s mouse and an infrared camera shines an invisible light onto — and through — your palm.
By measuring where that light is absorbed and reflected, the system maps the veins in your hand, a collection of crisscrossing lines that Fujitsu claims can reliably identify a user far more accurately than scanning the whorls or loops on his or her fingertip.
That innovative system, which Fujitsu calls Palmsecure, has been sold in its mouse-embedded form in the U.S. since August of last year.
It’s not cheap: A single mouse and software setup costs around $430 US.
But according to Fujitsu’s tests, vein pattern recognition can identify a user on the first try 99.99 per cent of the time and mistakenly approves the wrong user in only .00008 per cent of cases, far less often than fingerprint scanners.
“To get beyond this in terms of accuracy, you’d have to look to DNA,” says Joel Hagberg, Fujitsu’ vice president of marketing and business development. Vein pattern recognition is the latest — and in some respects, most promising — attempt to reach the holy grail of cybersecurity, what professional digital paranoiacs call “three-factor” authentication.
To prove users’ identity and keep out intruding data thieves, a system would test them based on something they know (say, a password), something they have (such as the RSA tokens that show an encrypted, changing series of numbers) and, perhaps trickiest of all, something they are — a “biometric” test of their physical characteristics.
That last factor has traditionally meant verifying a fingerprint, or in some high-security government settings, a high-resolution photograph of an iris. As cumbersome as that three-step process sounds, it may be increasingly important in keeping data secure, particularly in the business world. (more…)