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| A biosciences firm used a patent to turn hospital technology into a physical way to biometrically identify a person using vein patterns. |
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There are, of course, still plenty of public and private dollars pumping into physical security research and development and tech upgrades.
And the business battleground is getting rough and tumble.
Security firms are buying up patents; they are fighting over equipment designs; and many are fast-tracking the economics of scale thanks to government directives and mandates into enterprise solutions and consumer conveniences.
Probably no where do patents mean as much as with biometrics solutions. Firms protect their algorithms like they are golden Blackberrys. Finger, hand geometry, iris, retinal all are patent-protected. New approaches often need new patents, which can be licensed, too. A case in point:
Memphis, Tenn.-based Luminetx Corporation, in the bioscience technologies arena with a patented infrared vein-imaging system, VeinViewer, recently acquired the patent for biometric identification of individuals through the use of subcutaneous vein patterns. The patent addresses the use of subcutaneous vein patterns, unique to each individual, as a biometric for the registration and verification of individual identity.
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| Robot battle? A security firm contends that a new machine from Japan looks like one they designed four years ago. |
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Then there’s MobileRobots of Amherst, N.H. In releases to the media, the firm suggests a new Hitachi security robot that can map its surroundings and look for suspicious changes in the landscape is suspiciously similar – drum roll, please – to a MobileRobots Pioneer-DX with laser-mapping and navigation, available commercially for nearly four years. Says Dr. William Kennedy, co-founder of MobileRobots, “The wheel rims are the giveaway. The Pioneer DX systems sold a few years ago had unique gold wheel rims custom-manufactured for our company, which can be seen quite clearly in the photo…But it would be misleading to portray robot technologies we’ve sold commercially for four years as something new and revolutionary.”
Wow! Can a robot lawyer be in the works?
And traditional security and new-age security vendors are licking their chops over the hoped-for fallout of HSPD-12, which mandates the establishment of a standard for identification of Federal Government employees and contractors. It requires the use of a common identification credential for both logical and physical access to Federally-controlled facilities and information systems. FIPS 201 provides guidance for implementing the HSPD-12 requirements for a common Federal identification credential.
The federal effort should prove to be the Viagra for smart card implementation in large enterprises and even for bank consumers.