Societal and Ethical Implications of Anti-Spoofing Technologies in Biometrics |
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Authors: | Andrew P. Rebera Matteo E. Bonfanti Silvia Venier |
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Affiliation: | 1. The Centre for Science, Society and Citizenship, Piazza Capo di Ferro, 23, 00186, Rome, Italy
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Abstract: | Biometric identification is thought to be less vulnerable to fraud and forgery than are traditional forms of identification. However biometric identification is not without vulnerabilities. In a ‘spoofing attack’ an artificial replica of an individual’s biometric trait is used to induce a system to falsely infer that individual’s presence. Techniques such as liveness-detection and multi-modality, as well as the development of new and emerging modalities, are intended to secure biometric identification systems against such threats. Unlike biometrics in general, the societal and ethical issues raised by spoofing and anti-spoofing techniques have not received much attention. This paper examines these issues. |
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