Breaking

Sunday, February 11, 2018

No more Windows 10 passwords? Microsoft says Hello to palm-vein bio-metrics

Microsoft and Fujitsu have teamed up to enable palm-vein authentication on Windows 10 as part of Windows Hello.



Microsoft has added Windows 10 Pro support for palm-vein authentication, as part of its Windows Hello facial and fingerprint-recognition system.

The palm-vein authentication comes by way of a collaboration with Fujitsu, a Windows 10 enterprise hardware partner that is in the process of deploying its own palm-vein biometric technology to 80,000 employees in Japan.

The partnership means Windows 10 Pro users will be able to use Fujitsu's PalmSecure sensors that are embedded into the keyboard of Fujitsu laptops or on a scanner attached via USB.

Users hover a hand over the sensor rather than touching a fingerprint sensor. The scanner is already built into Fujitsu's Lifebook and Stylystic series notebooks for the enterprise.

The scan focuses on unique blue veins in the hand to authenticate users without requiring a password. One advantage over fingerprint and facial recognition is that it's harder to copy veins under the skin.

Fujitsu markets PalmSecure as a "contactless, hygienic and non-invasive system" for authentication and says the palm scan has a false identification rate of 0.00008 percent and an identification failure rate of 0.01 percent.

Fujitsu notes that Brazilian bank Banco Bradesco and Korean credit card company Lotte Card are using the technology.

Lotte Card last year rolled out its Hand Pay service using PalmSecure, which allows customers to pay for goods using their hand instead of a card. Bradesco deployed the technology on ATMs several years ago.




No comments:

Post a Comment