The Case Against Biometric Identity Theft Protection

According to Winston Churchill, there is no worse mistake in leadership than to hold out false hopes. One area where false hopes have long abounded is information security, and it's happening again.

By George Tillmann

Tue, October 27, 2009Computerworld According to Winston Churchill, there is no worse mistake in leadership than to hold out false hopes. One area where false hopes have long abounded is information security, and it's happening again.

This time the false hope we're extending is that we can deploy one simple piece of technology that will significantly reduce the problem of identity theft. Of course, identity theft is a huge and growing problem. Each year, the identifying information of millions of Americans is stolen from corporate databases. Companies face billions of dollars in theft, millions of dollars in fines and, perhaps most important, the loss of customer trust.

Worse, identity theft can harm victims through lost savings, rejected loans and denied jobs. CIOs are faced with a security challenge that threatens the viability not only of the IT organization but of the entire corporation as well. To date, the countermeasures that we've deployed -- passwords, PINs and authentication tokens -- have been ineffective. All can be stolen and used by the nefarious.

This has made inexpensive biometrics look attractive for authenticating employees, customers, citizens, students and any other people we want to recognize. But do the benefits of biometrics outweigh the risks?

Biometrics rely not on something you have (a credit card) or something you know (a PIN), but something you are(your fingerprints, palm prints or retinas). Those unique biological identifiers are electronically read and converted to a string of ones and zeros and sent to an authenticator. There the information is compared with the string of numbers on file in the authenticator database.

And there is the weakness, for the risk of transmission interception or database theft remains unchanged. If a credit card number can be stolen, then the sequence of numbers that make up a fingerprint can be stolen just as easily. It might take thieves a little time to gear up to this new challenge, but gear up they will. Undoubtedly, in the years to come, news reports about fingerprint, palm print and retinal eye scan thefts will be just as common as credit card number thefts are today.

Related Links

Other Columns by George Tillmann

IT services account managers: Planning globally, acting locally

Customers and clients and consumers, oh my!

Aligning IT with the business is not enough

When it comes to IT's customers, one size does not fit all

Don't report to the CEO? Maybe that's OK

So, does that mean biometrics will leave us right where we are? No, they will leave us in a worse place. Think about it: If you lose your credit or ATM card, the issuing company can replace it. If your PIN becomes compromised, the bank can give you a new one. Even a Social Security number can be replaced. But what do you do if someone steals your retina scans? Who is going to give you new eyeballs?

Security

Loading...
 
SPONSORED LINKS
 

Making Consumer Two-Factor Authentication Simple and Cost-Effective

Mining the Cloud to Ease the Enterprise Compliance Burden

Solve Five Key IT Security Challenges with Cloud-Based Authentication

White Paper: Managed Security for a Not-So-Secure World

Secure Email and Web-Based Communication from Evolving Attacks

WagerWorks Takes Fraudsters Out of the Game using iovation

White Paper: A Security Blueprint Delivered From within the Network

Return on Information: Google Enterprise Search pays you back

ROI of Application Delivery Controllers

Webcast: Unleashing the Power of Customer Data

Disciplined Autonomy: Resolving the Tension Between Flexibility and Control

Enterprise Capture: Your Onramp to Business Process Automation

Cloud Computing--What is its Potential Value for Your Company?

Seven Design Requirements for Web 2.0 Threat Protection

Adobe® LiveCycle® solutions for business process automation

10 Ways Excel Drives More Value from Your SAP Investment

The Key to Proving and Improving the Value of IT to the Company

Unleash the Power of Java with Oracle JRockit Real Time

Taking the Service Desk to the Next Level

Return on Information: Google Enterprise Search pays you back. Get the facts.

VMware. The source for Business Infrastructure Virtualization.

ShoreTel tells businesses to untangle from competitors' complexity and turn to its brilliantly simple UC solution

See how AT&T can help protect your network.

Streamline IT Costs. Boost Performance with WAN Optimization.

Build your 1st app FREE with Force.com

Authentication as a Service by Forrester Research

Cloud-Based Authentication for Next-Generation Extranets

Mobile Security: The Essential Ingredient for Today's Enterprise

IDC White Paper: CCM for IT Compliance and Risk Management

Keeping Your Members Safe from Online Scams and Predators

Learn about the growing threat of insider data theft.

Upgrading to VMware vSphere with vWire

Maximizing website Return on Information with high-quality search

Gartner Magic Quadrant, Application Delivery Controllers 2009

Learn How Web Site Performance Impacts Shopper Behavior

Build a Foundation for Unified Communications

Removing the Barriers to IT Governance: How On-Demand Software Changes the Game

Should Your Email Live In The Cloud? A Comparative Cost Analysis

How Consumerization of IT Will Make Your Business More Productive

How does a software company save big with Green IT?

Translate business strategy into IT strategy and obtain maximum benefits.

eBook: How Can You Make Your People Productive Anywhere?

Mind the Talent Gap: Global Survey on IT and HR trends and challenges

"Enterprise-Proven" is the Prerequisite for Enterprise SaaS Portal Solutions

AT&T Synaptic Storage as a Service. Expand on demand

Trend Micro ranked #1 against real-world malware. Read more.

Webinar: Jump-start your in-house e-discovery with Ringtail QuickCull from FTI Technology

Top Five CIO Challenges

Read the RSA report: Security for Business Innovation

64-page prescriptive guide to security, compliance, and IT operations.

 
 
RESOURCE CENTER