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Banks not yet banking on biometrics
By Laura
Bruce Bankrate.com
When will the James
Bond world of iris scans and hand-and-voice-recognition devices
come to the world of banking?
Just a few years ago, trade magazines were touting
how eagerly financial institutions were considering these devices
that held promise for better identifying customers and reducing
fraud and theft.
So, have you had your fingerprint scanned recently
at your bank? Probably not.
Even in light of the fact that the Sept. 11 terrorists
were able to open bank accounts with fraudulent Social Security
numbers, the Treasury Department's newly proposed rules for ensuring
customer identification contain no biometric measures.
Industry experts have a hard time putting a finger
on exactly why enthusiasm for biometrics has been lukewarm recently.
"Maybe it was the newness of biometrics five
years ago," says Bill Rogers of William Rogers & Associates,
credit union consultant and publisher of Biometric Digest.
"Like everything else, 'Here's some new technology,
let's take a look at it,' and then it kind of cooled."
Banks balk at bio-measures
Bank United was one of the first to jump on the biometrics bandwagon.
The company ran a pilot program using 75 ATMs outfitted with iris
scans in Kroger supermarkets in the Dallas-Fort Worth area.
But the program died a quick death when Washington
Mutual bought Bank United in mid-2000 and ended what is believed
to be the only effort to deploy iris-scanning ATMs in America.
Iridian Technologies in Moorestown, N.J., specializes
in iris-recognition technology.
"In the past, one of our founding companies participated
in programs to pursue banking and other financial institutions,"
says spokeswoman Lina Page.
"Although we saw some success in terms of performance,
the cost of the hardware and software, which were greater than they
are today, may have been a factor in not moving beyond the pilot
programs.
"Iridian doesn't identify the financial services
market as one of our target markets."
In addition to the cost theory, some experts think
banks shy away from biometrics because customers might consider
it an intrusion.
For whatever reason that progress has been slow, banks
and the biometrics industry aren't giving up on each other. In fact,
a biometrics infiltration is taking place.
Bio-banking making small strides
The most popular use of biometrics in banking may be a device
made by Diebold called PassVault, which allows customers to access
their safe-deposit box unassisted by bank personnel.
Customers are given a personal identification number
and register their hand or fingerprint scan when applying for a
box.
When customers want to open their box, they punch
their PIN into a keypad and their finger or handprint is scanned
by Passvault. The "day gate" opens and the customer then
opens their box with a key.
Diebold spokesman Joe Richardson says hundreds of
financial institutions have installed the device.
"Chances are you'll stay with a bank as long
as you have a safe-deposit box. While banks don't like the fuss
of letting people in and out of the safe-deposit area, they'll go
through it to keep the customer. PassVault achieves the same thing
without involving bank personnel."
Many banks require noncustomers to leave behind a
thumbprint when cashing checks, but more and more financial institutions
are also requiring a thumbprint when new customers open an account.
Andrew Zavonia, senior vice president at First National
Bank Texas in Killeen, Texas, says it's a security feature that
customers accept.
"I was told that we have had no instances where
someone said, 'I don't want to do that. I'm leaving.' For the most
part they seem to think it's fine."
Credit unions ahead of the curve
Leslie Nguyen, vice president at Orange County Credit Union
in Santa Ana, Calif., says her institution takes the thumbprint
a step further by also scanning the new customer's signature.
"We scan the information and it pops up on the
teller machine so the teller can do a visual verification. There
are certain characteristics the tellers use to compare. If you turn
a signature upside down you can see the characteristics even better."
Orange County Credit Union requires a thumbprint and
signature scan for all new accounts and offers it to customers with
existing accounts.
"They go for it. When the teller explains it's
for their security they think it's a great idea. They won't have
to bring ID to the credit union and they know we won't cross them
with someone else with the same name.
"It's also been quite successful in deterring
new-account fraud," says Nguyen. "Usually, a person who's
going to commit fraud doesn't want their thumbprint scanned."
Credit unions appear to be leading the way in using
biometrics to enable customers to open accounts without the assistance
of any personnel.
Real Time Data Management has devised a kiosk that
scans a person's fingerprint and accepts their initial deposit.
The kiosk can be set up anywhere.
Bill Rogers says 35 credit unions have deployed the
fingerprint-identifying kiosks.
"Many credit unions serve multiple groups of
members, small employee groups that are too small to open a branch
at their location, but they can have a kiosk."
In addition to opening new accounts, customers make
deposits, withdrawals, check their balances and even apply for loans
at the kiosk without any assistance.
Credit unions, according to Rogers, often are ahead
of banks in making use of new technology.
"Credit unions were innovative in sharing their
ATM networks while banks often have proprietary ATMs. Credit unions,
traditionally, don't compete with each other. That's changed a little
over the years, but all banks compete with each other."
Experts have little doubt that banks will move rapidly
toward biometrics once some key decisions are made.
"It's easy for banks to deploy biometrics internally,
say, for employees to have access to a network, but deploying it
for customers is a different story," says Richard Norton of
the Washington, D.C.-based International Biometric Industry Association.
"Do you have to retrofit an entire network of
ATMs or do you take a different approach with wireless devices that
may offer greater security and flexibility?
"I think in a year or two you'll start to see
a lot more biometrics in routine applications and the banking industry
will be right there with the rest of the world."
Bill Rogers believes the credit card industry may
be the leader in letting us forget our credit card, debit card and
ATM card PINs forever.
"One of these days we'll all get a letter from
Visa saying enclosed is an ink pad. If you want to use a biometric
identifier send back a fingerprint, we'll bar code it and it will
take the place of a PIN."
Betcha can't wait.
-- Posted: July 23, 2002
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