Saturday, May 30, 2026
ADVT 
Interesting

Banks And Other Industries Embrace Biometrics To Boost Security, Convenience

The Canadian Press, 22 Jul, 2016 12:16 PM
    TORONTO — In the not-too-distant future, your bank will be able to prevent fraud by learning how you type, your car will unlock when it senses the electrical activity of your heart and the security system at your office will recognize your facial features.
     
    That's according to experts in the field of biometrics, which identifies a person by measuring unique characteristics such as their fingerprints, their retinas or their voice.
     
    But these types of distinctive identification authentication processes offer more than the promise of a higher degree of security than traditional passwords.
     
    Biometrics will also free consumers from the need to memorize a myriad of characters — a convenience that will appeal to anyone who needs to access a secure computer or network regularly.
     
    "People are having to jump through more and more hoops to create a secure authentication," says Karl Martin, founder of Nymi, a Toronto-based startup that created a wristband that can identify its wearer based on their electrocardiogram, or the electrical activity of their heart.
     
    "How many times a day do you have to prove who you are, whether it be through a password or a biometric or other means?"
     
    Banks — and the financial services industry, more broadly — have been one of the quickest adopters of biometrics technology, given their strong need for security and identity verification, says Bianca Lopes, director of strategy at BioConnect.
     
    "They're inherently wired and regulated to protect the customer with things like know-your-client and anti-money laundering rules," says Lopes, whose company helps businesses integrate biometrics technologies across various channels.
     
    Royal Bank (TSX:RY) is currently testing out technologies such as iris scanning, face recognition, speech recognition and fingerprint scans — and is expecting to roll out the features to customers in 2017.
     
    Martin says Nymi has completed successful pilot projects alongside RBC and TD Bank (TSX:TD) to test out how its wristband can be used to verify purchases, while MasterCard recently launched a service that allows users to verify their identities with their smartphones by taking a selfie or using a fingerprint scanner.
     
     
    Notably, it's the popularity of the fingerprint scanner on Apple iPhones that's made consumers more comfortable and familiar with biometrics, says Dennis Gamiello, vice-president of identity solutions at MasterCard.
     
    "Fortunately, Apple and some of the other digital players that have introduced (biometric) capabilities are in some ways helping train the consumers for us."
     
    Biometrics can also identify users based on how they behave — for instance, their typing patterns or the way that they swipe across the screen on a mobile device.
     
    "The way that you actually interact with the phone, the way that you swipe the phone ... it's fairly unique to you," explains Eddy Ortiz, RBC's vice-president of innovation and solution acceleration.
     
    In the future, behavioural biometrics could even be used to detect if a fraudster has somehow gained access to your bank account, Lopes adds.
     
    While identity verification is important, the capabilities of biometrics go beyond that function, notes Martin. The technology can also be used to create personalized environments — by setting the thermostat to your preferred temperature, for example — at your home, the office or a commercial space.
     
    "We're looking at how can identity be used to create completely personalized experiences," says Martin, pointing to cars as an example.
     
    "You may have a shared vehicle but you have preferences in terms of the seat height and position and the steering wheel and entertainment and all of those things."
     
    Experts concede that while biometrics can beef up security, improve convenience and create personalized environments, for some users the technologies may evoke scenes from the popular science fiction film "Minority Report" — a Tom Cruise mystery-thriller, which features a future of nearly boundless technological advancements designed to protect its citizenry.
     
     
    "There will be consumers who get creeped out," says Krista Jones, head of work and learning at the MaRS Discovery District.
     
    Ultimately, though, the technology gives consumers a greater guarantee that their private information will be kept safe, she adds.
     
    "We have an opportunity to craft this in such a way that the privacy of the consumer is at the heart of this."

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!

    Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!
    This may sound and read unbelievable but there is an elderly man whose brain has no neural fibre connection between his two hemispheres!

    Man with 'disconnected' brain, alive and kicking at 88!

    How people's brains get synchronised during movies

    How people's brains get synchronised during movies
    Uri Hasson, a psychologist at Princeton University analysed brain scan data his team collected as people watched several different video clips....

    How people's brains get synchronised during movies

    Male tilapia fish use urine to lure mates!

    Male tilapia fish use urine to lure mates!
    Native to southern Africa, Mozambican tilapia fish use urine to reduce aggressive behaviour in other males, lure females to the nests that they make...

    Male tilapia fish use urine to lure mates!

    Morning sex makes for a healthy start!

    Morning sex makes for a healthy start!
    Mornings are not just perfect for jogging or quieter moments in the park. Try sex in the wee hours that will sure improve your otherwise dull and boring day like never before!

    Morning sex makes for a healthy start!

    How birds learnt to fly

    How birds learnt to fly
    Birds have an innate ability to maneuver in mid-air, a talent that could have helped their ancestors learn to fly rather than fall from a perch, says a study...

    How birds learnt to fly

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning
    "Parents may not understand a baby's prattling, but by listening and responding, they let their infants know they can communicate which leads to children...

    Engage with babbling infants to improve language learning