Integrating biometric authentication into multiple applications
Abstract (Summary)
Integrating biometric authentication into multiple applications
Candidate:
Study Leader:
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Degree:
Morné Breedt
Prof MS Olivier
Computer Science
MSc (Computer Science)
The Internet has grown from its modest academic beginnings into an important,
global communication medium. It has become a significant, intrinsic part of our
lives, how we distribute information and how we transact. It is used for a variety
of purposes, including: banking; home shopping; commercial trade — using EDI
(Electronic Data Interchange); and to gather information for market research and
other activities.
Owing to its academic origins, the early developers of the Internet did not
focus on security. However, now that it has rapidly evolved into an extensively
used, global commercial transaction and distribution channel, security has
become a big concern. Fortunately, the field of information security has started to
evolve in response and is fast becoming an important discipline with a sound
theoretical basis.
The discipline views the twin processes of identification and authentication
as crucial aspects of information security. An individual access attempt must be
identifiable prior to access being authorised otherwise system confidentiality
cannot be enforced nor integrity safeguarded. Similarly, non-denial becomes
impossible to instigate since the system is unable to log an identity against
specific transactions. Consequently, identification and authentication should
always be viewed as the first step to successfully enforcing information security.
The process of identification and authorisation is, in essence, the ability to
prove or verify an identity. This is usually accomplished using either one or a
combination of the following three traditional identification techniques: something
you possess; something you know; or something you are. A critical consideration
when designing an application is which identification method, or combination of
methods, from the three described above to use. Each method offers its own pros
and cons and there are many ways to compare and contrast them.
The comparison made in this study identifies biometrics as the best
solution in a distributed application environment. There are, however, two overarching
hindrances to its widespread adoption. The first is the environment’s
complexity ? with multiple applications being accessed by both the public and
the private sectors ? and the second is that not all biometrics are popular and no
single method has universe appeal.
The more significant hindrance of the two is the latter, that of acceptance
and trust, because it matters little how good or efficient a system is if nobody is
willing to use it. This observation suggests that the identification system needs to
be made as flexible as possible. In a democratic society, it could be argued that
the best way of ensuring the successful adoption of a biometric system would be
to allow maximum freedom of choice and let users decide which biometric
method they would like to use. Although this approach is likely to go a long way
towards solving the acceptance issue, it increases the complexity of the
environment significantly.
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This study attempts to solve this problem by reducing the environment’s
complexity while simultaneously ensuring the user retains maximum biometric
freedom of choice. This can be achieved by creating a number of central biometric
repositories. Each repository would be responsible for maintaining a biometric
template data store for a type of biometric. These repositories or “Biometric
Authorities” would act as authentication facilitators for a wide variety of
applications and free them from that responsibility.
Bibliographical Information:
Advisor:
School:University of Pretoria/Universiteit van Pretoria
School Location:South Africa
Source Type:Master's Thesis
Keywords:electronic information resources authentication biometric identification internet
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