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  2. Live scan - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Live_scan

    Live scan fingerprinting refers to both the technique and the technology used by law enforcement agencies and private facilities to capture fingerprints and palm prints electronically, without the need for the more traditional method of ink and paper.

  3. IDEMIA - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IDEMIA

    Fingerprint verification is done directly on the card and no fingerprint-related elements are transmitted to the merchant nor the bank. In response to the growing demand from companies to use contactless access control devices to guarantee both a secure and hygienic method of identity verification, IDEMIA offers biometric terminals that use ...

  4. Future Attribute Screening Technology - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Future_Attribute_Screening...

    Other researchers, such as Tom Ormerod of the Investigative Expertise Unit at the UK's Lancaster University, argue that ordinary travel anxieties could cause false positives—Ormerod told Nature "even having an iris scan or fingerprint read at immigration is enough to raise the heart rate of most legitimate travellers". [7]

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  7. Fingerprint scanner - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fingerprint_scanner

    The measure of the fingerprint image quality is in dots per inch (DPI). [8] Optical scanners take a visual image of the fingerprint using a digital camera. Capacitive or CMOS scanners use capacitors and thus electric current to form an image of the fingerprint. This type of scanner tends to excel in terms of precision.

  8. Biometrics - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biometrics

    An early cataloguing of fingerprints dates back to 1885 when Juan Vucetich started a collection of fingerprints of criminals in Argentina. [23] Josh Ellenbogen and Nitzan Lebovic argued that Biometrics originated in the identification systems of criminal activity developed by Alphonse Bertillon (1853–1914) and by Francis Galton 's theory of ...

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