Posted: November 9th, 2011 | Author: cmaxmost
The latest on the UK border debacle is a classic case of “he said, she said”
UK border chief Brodie Clark quits over passport scandal with broadside against Theresa May
Brodie Clark, the senior civil servant at the heart of the scandal over relaxed passport checks, has made a direct attack on Theresa May, accusing the Home Secretary of misleading the public.
His resignation and attack on Mrs May escalates the most serious immigration row the Coalition has faced.
Over the summer, (Mrs May) secretly authorised border staff to stop checking biometric data in the passports of European arrivals at ports and airports. She says Mr Clark then defied her clear orders and extended the policy to non-Europeans.
Regardless of how this all washes out, whose at fault, and who actually takes the blame, the failure to complete biometric ePassport checks at the UK border is just bad news for biometrics at the border.
“Secure border” programs are consistently attacked in many locations as excessively expensive while providing minimal if any improvement in security. The senstiive nature of data related to these programs precludes most countries in most cases from releasing performance statistics. So, the only public relations are the fiasco stories aka the current UK border debacle feeding the fire of those with legitimate concerns about the cost benefit implications of identification programs.
Sadly, as we have seen many times in our industry, it is not the biometric or other identification technology that is at fault, but rather poorly designed, implemented, or managed ID programs that fail us.
Filed under: Airport Security, Automated Border Control, Biometrics, eIDs, ePassports | No Comments »
Posted: May 13th, 2011 | Author: cmaxmost
The latest news form Europe is that passport free travel across the Schengen area may be a thing of the past. In response to the influx of Arab spring’s flood of refugees, “European interior ministers agree to ‘radical revision’ of Schengen amid fears of a flood of migrants from north Africa“.
The extremely scary part of this development is that it is being driven by a “resurgent Europhobic far right across the EU”. Yikes.
In a serious blow to one of the cornerstones of a united, integrated Europe, EU interior ministers embarked on a radical revision of the passport-free travel regime known as the Schengen system to allow the 26 participating governments to restore border controls.
The border-free region embraces more than 400m people in 22 EU countries, as well as Switzerland, Liechtenstein, Norway and Iceland. It extends from Portugal to Russia’s borders on the Baltic, and from Reykjavik to Turkey’s border with Greece.
The move to curb freedom of travel came as the extreme nationalist right, which is increasingly influencing policy across Europe, chalked up a notable victory in Denmark, which announced it would unilaterally re-erect controls on its borders with Germany and Sweden
So, while I am somewhat chilled by the motivation, it would seem Automated Border Control processes at air, land and sea ports for people, and personal and commercial vehicles will be critical to minimize the impact of these measures on cross border facilitation.
I would imagine (and hope) that some of this “Europhobic” hysteria will be tempered over the next few months and years, though in the short term it will likely provide a boost to the industry.
We must, however, be very careful as an industry NOT to be seen as a vehicle for the expression of right wing politics. The consequences of becoming embroiled in the midst of an idealogical struggle will not only be detrimental to the industry but will be a major set back for the work that has been done to promote electronic identity as a path to the preservation and even expansion of privacy and civil liberties.
Cheers,
Maxine
Filed under: Airport Security, Automated Border Control, Biometrics, Document Readers, ePassports, Mobility | No Comments »
Posted: May 4th, 2011 | Author: cmaxmost
In many ways the evolution of the identity credential market is likely to mimic what transpired around the turn of the 21st century in the film photography market.
The decade started well enough for Eastman Kodak. In 2000 it clocked film revenues of $11 billion, had 70,000 employees and 14 factories around the world. Then things started going pear shaped. Come 2009, revenues from the sale of film had fallen to $1.3 billion, the workforce had dropped to 20,000 and the number of factories had gone down to one.
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Filed under: Data Driven Analysis, eIDs, ePassports, eVisas, National ID | No Comments »
Posted: March 6th, 2011 | Author: cmaxmost
Flight of Brockton suspect documents US security gap – The Boston Globe.
According to this report in the Boston Globe, a 40 year old foreign national from Ecuador used the passport of a 26 year old from the same country to board a plane in Boston shortly after murdering a woman and her child.
The US is so obsessed with security that we have introduced full body scans and yet somehow our security is not sophisticated enough to notice someone traveling on a passport when they don’t even really resemble person to whom the passport was issued.
Now, I would wager – and I am definitely am not a gambler – that any of the top 10 commercial facial recognition engines would have easily determined that the person in the photo was not the person going through the security line. And for a fraction of the billions invested post 9/11 in airport security.
Cheers,
max
Filed under: Airport Security, ePassports | No Comments »
Posted: March 5th, 2011 | Author: cmaxmost
I have been working on the new Acuity website so I have been immersed in the process of distilling clear, concise messaging and communications about our business and editing and reediting web pages to get them just right. I become near obsessive when I do this. I actually started out my career as a SW engineer but quickly gave that up because it made me kind of crazy. Whenever I become engaged in anything remotely technical I remember why. The obsessions grabs me and I find myself up until 3 am in this case painstakingly modifying web pages over and over again until I feel like I am closer to some bizarre and fantasized sense of perfection. Which of course fades quickly the next day when I look at the site again and find scores of typos, bad links, and pages that seemed to have magically disappeared.
What does this have to do with data driven market analysis? Everything; at least for me. I just wrote the following for the “Why Us?” page of the site:
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Filed under: Automated Border Control, Biometrics, Data Driven Analysis, ePassports, Market Research | 2 Comments »