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Freitag, 22.11.2024
Transforming Government since 2001

Biometrie

  • India to integrate census with biometric database

    India’s government has unveiled plans to link its biometrics-backed unique ID number, the Aadhaar, with the National Population Register.

    New Delhi says this will lead to a consolidated database that will help it uncover illegal immigrants, money-laundering, and terrorism.

    The Aadhar number is individual based, whereas the NPR scheme focuses on the household or the family as a composite unit.

  • Indian Department of Fisheries asks fishermen to submit biometrics for ID cards

    The Indian Department of Fisheries has asked fisherman living along the coast in Bhogapuram and Poosapatirega mandals to submit biometric details, so they can receive biometric identification cards from personnel visiting the remote areas, The Hindu reports.

    K. Phani Prakash, the assistant director for the Department of Fisheries said out of the 10,000 fishermen living in the two mandals, 3,745 have submitted the appropriate details for ID cards, to be distributed soon.

  • Indian Fisheries Department begins distributing biometric ID cards to fishermen

    The Fisheries Department of India has begun the distribution of Biometric Fingerprint Identity Cards (BFICs) to fishermen in the Paradip Port Township, The Pioneer reports.

    Paradip Port is one of the major ports of India, serving both the eastern and central parts of the country. Of the 1,715 fishermen in the area, only 250 have received their unique BFICs at a function held in the village, attended by the Director of Fisheries PK Mohan and Commandant of the Coast Guard, Anil Sharma.  According to the article, as many as 21,695 fishermen of 96 villages in the Jagatsinghpur district as well as approximately 18,000 fishermen of the 109 villages in Kendrapada are going to get the new BFICs.

  • Indonesia most advanced adopter of eID credentials

    Implementing a biometrically-enabled identification card in Indonesia, the country with the fourth largest population, has been a vital step in creating a nationwide identification infrastructure which embraces and enhances a number of applications, including e-government, financial projects and social services.

    As BiometricUpdate.com has previously mentioned, Indonesia committed US$600 million to provide a national identity card to all of its 172 million residents. The Asian nation has introduced a new eID credential to replace all existing identity cards. The cards, entitled Kartu Tanda Penduduk Elektronik, or e-KTP for short, will be used for voter registration, passport issuance, tax payments and to verify identity for social assistance.

  • Is India’s biometric benefits database trampling privacy?

    In 2009 India announced its grand universal biometric scheme “Aadhaar”. The scheme, managed by the Unique Identification Authority of India (UIDAI), collects the fingerprints, iris scans and facial images of applicants in exchange for a national identification number. First handed out in 2010 the numbers, randomised 12-digit codes, function as “internal passports” which can be used as proof of identity to access state services.

    November 2013 marked 500 million enrolments to the scheme, making Aadhaar the largest biometric programme in the world. This year the scheme is set to be linked to major development reforms, and the collection of data, stored in a centrally controlled database, aims to improve transparency, reduce corruption and ensure access to the country’s myriad of welfare benefits.

  • Jamaican Firearms Licensing Authority launches biometric ID card

    The Firearm Licensing Authority (FLA) in Jamaica has launched a new high security identification card for gun owners in the country.

    The new card will reportedly store a photograph of the cardholder as well as fingerprint information. Reported in theJamaica Information Service, National Security Minister, Hon. Peter Bunting said he is looking forward to gains in law enforcement and security as a result of the implementation of this card, and has also tasked the FLA to develop a smartphone app which ties into this database to verify identity.

  • Jordan is the first country to provide iris recognition for digital transformation services

    A strategic partnership between the Jordanian Ministry of Digital Economy and IrisGuard to implement iris recognition technologies for Government digital services delivery

    Today, IrisGuard nd the Jordanian Ministry of Digital Economy and Entrepreneurship signed a strategic partnership agreement for the use of iris recognition to enhance access to Governmental and private sector services. This partnership marks a significant change in the way services are provided to its citizens and residents, reinforcing their digital transformation journey, with Jordan being the first country to apply innovative iris recognition technologies in Governmental services.

  • Kenya introduces biometrics for voter’s registration

    This week, nearly 1,000 Kenyan election commission officials received training in the use of new biometric voter registration kits. Biometric voter registration uses fingerprints and facial features to uniquely identify each voter.

    With only four months until elections, officials must work quickly. They face additional pressure in Coast Province, where a secessionist group has threatened to disrupt the voter registration effort.

  • Kenya taps EDAPS for biometric portal

    The Kenyan Ministry of Immigration and Registration of Persons has decided to implement biometric identification and verification systems, as well as a biometric portal for the country’s Integrated Population Register System (IPRS).

    Software for the IPRS as well for the identity and verification systems has been developed by Ukrainian identification technology, EDAPS, which specializes in the implementation of large-scale government and corporate projects including identification and biometrics.

  • Lebanon to introduce biometric passports in 2014

    Lebanon is looking to introduce biometric passports to its citizens as of 2014. This is in line with the International Civil Aviation Organization’s mandatory requirement for the adoption of biometric technologies by 2015, the Daily Star reported.

    “This change is necessary in light of continuing passport fraud around the world,” Col. Hasan Ali Ahmad, head of the IT department at the Directorate General of General Security   in Lebanon told the Daily Start in an interview.

  • Malaysia introduces biometric vehicle ownership transfer system

    The Malaysian Road Transport Department is introducing a biometric system to replace its vehicle ownership transfer system.

    According to a report in The Star, the new system – called MySikap – is based on thumbprint biometrics and replaces a physical form system. The RTD handles an average of 1.4 million vehicle ownership transfers each year.

    MySikap has been implemented in some states from as early as 2011, though starting next week all Malaysians will be able to use the system.

  • Malaysia to use biometric system for tracking foreigners

    Malaysia is working to introduce a unique biometric tracking system, that it says will more effectively allow its Immigration Department to track foreigners who overstay.

    Many foreigners misuse their social visit passes and stay on in Malaysia to work illegally, including taking part in activities of vice.

    In the past, Malaysia has said that thousands of Indian nationals had stayed back in the country long after the expiry of their visas.

  • Malaysian government weighs biometric options for elections

    The Malaysian government is actively considering swapping out its existing indelible ink system for its voter verification exercises for a new biometric thumbprint alternative.

    Reported in The Star Online, a Federal minister made comments alluding to the potential technology acquisition and said an Election Committee will be formed soon.

    Having used the old indelible ink for so long, there has been some resistance to the potential new system. Reported in the Sun Daily, the Center for Public Policy Studies director Ng Yeen Seen said any policy before implementation needs proper analysis and a pilot study before execution.

  • NADRA introduces Pakistan’s new biometric smart ID cards

    NADRA Chairman Tariq Malik announced Pakistan’s roll out of new smart ID cards last week.

    The announcement was made at the International Civil Aviation Organisation’s (ICAO) Eighth Symposium and Exhibition on MRTDs, Biometrics and Security Standards in Montreal.

    The new cards are identified as Smart National Identity Card (SNIC), Smart National Identity Card for Overseas Pakistanis (SNICOP) and Smart Pakistan Origin Card (SPOC).

  • Nigerian citizens to be issued unique national identity numbers

    The National Population Commission (NPC) in Nigeria has started a comprehensive biometric capture exercise, which aims to collect biometrics from every Nigerian citizen and resident, Vanguard reports.

    Designed to curtail insurgency and other criminal challenges, this new objective will ultimately issue unique identity numbers to Nigerians, not unlike the Aadhaar program initiated by the Unique Identity Authority of India, which similarly aims to capture the biometrics of all of India’s 1.2 billion habitants.

  • Nigerian engineers push for biometrics in upcoming election

    Nigeria could become the next African country to use biometric technology to enroll voters and count votes on election day.

    Considering the country’s past record of biometric objectives, an election using the technology is not unlikely.

    According to a report in ITWeb, the Nigerian Society of Engineers has recommended that the country’s electoral commission use the Nigerian Communication Satellite (NigComSat) e-voting platform, which hinges on biometric enrollment.

  • Nigerians will use biometric authentication for ATMs, PoS from 2015 – Sanusi

    Mr. Sanusi said ATM fraud has reduced by 90 per cent.

    The Central Bank Governor, Lamido Sanusi, has said that the implementation of bio-metric authentication for Point of Sales (PoS) and Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) will commence by 2015.

    Mr. Sanusi, who was represented by the Abuja Branch Controller of the Central Bank, John Chukwudifu, spoke on Tuesday in Abuja at the opening ceremony of the stakeholders sensitisation programme on the cashless policy.

  • OASIS Begins New Effort to Define Biometrics Standards for Interoperability

    3M HIS, Booz Allen Hamilton, U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST), U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) and Others to Advance Biometrics Use in Distributed Environments

    The OASIS international open standards consortium has launched its new Biometrics Technical Committee, with support from government agencies, companies, and universities from around the world. The OASIS Biometrics Technical Committee will create standards that improve interoperability in distributed environments, making biometrics more viable within multi-factor authentication.

  • One lakh Nepalis set to get biometric ID cards this fiscal

    Some 100,000 Nepalis will receive national identity cards (IDs) with personal data, including biometric identity, within the current fiscal (2069-70 BS). Also called smart card, the ID is being distributed with the objective of providing unique ID numbers for each person by including details of each Nepali citizen in the national databank.

    The government has expedited preparations with an objective of distributing electronic ID by the end of the FY from any one constituency of the country having internet services. It has presented the framework for distribution of ID with thumb print to 100,000 citizens as a pilot project with aid from the Asian Development Bank at the Council of Ministers for approval. The National ID Management Centre will distribute ID within the next five years in three phases, centre’s executive director Narendra Dahal said.

  • Palestine to Introduce the Biometric Information System

    Palestine is expected to introduce the biometric information system and database and which will include all the personal data on its citizens, the undersecretary of the Ministry of Interior Hasan Allawi said Wednesday.

    He said in an interview with WAFA that as of next year, the Palestinian passport will include a barcode that will include all the information needed on the holder of the passport, including fingerprints, blood type, the eye cornea and other facial features, and which is expected to facilitate their movement through airports.

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