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                    | fatalbert  ism you is, or ism you ain't mine maybe...
 
  
 
 
 Group: Members
 Posts: 186
 Joined: Feb. 2002
 
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                                |  | Posted on: May 16 2002,21:11 |  |      |  Fun with Fingerprint Readers
 
 Tsutomu Matsumoto, a Japanese cryptographer, recently decided to look at
 biometric fingerprint devices.  These are security systems that attempt to
 identify people based on their fingerprint.  For years the companies
 selling these devices have claimed that they are very secure, and that it
 is almost impossible to fool them into accepting a fake finger as
 genuine.  Matsumoto, along with his students at the Yokohama National
 University, showed that they can be reliably fooled with a little ingenuity
 and $10 worth of household supplies.
 
 Matsumoto uses gelatin, the stuff that Gummi Bears are made out of.  First
 he takes a live finger and makes a plastic mold.  (He uses a free-molding
 plastic used to make plastic molds, and is sold at hobby shops.)  Then he
 pours liquid gelatin into the mold and lets it harden.  (The gelatin comes
 in solid sheets, and is used to make jellied meats, soups, and candies, and
 is sold in grocery stores.)  This gelatin fake finger fools fingerprint
 detectors about 80% of the time.
 
 His more interesting experiment involves latent fingerprints.  He takes a
 fingerprint left on a piece of glass, enhances it with a cyanoacrylate
 adhesive, and then photographs it with a digital camera.  Using PhotoShop,
 he improves the contrast and prints the fingerprint onto a transparency
 sheet.  Then, he takes a photo-sensitive printed-circuit board (PCB) and
 uses the fingerprint transparency to etch the fingerprint into the copper,
 making it three-dimensional.  (You can find photo-sensitive PCBs, along
 with instructions for use, in most electronics hobby shops.)  Finally, he
 makes a gelatin finger using the print on the PCB.  This also fools
 fingerprint detectors about 80% of the time.
 
 Gummy fingers can even fool sensors being watched by guards.  Simply form
 the clear gelatin finger over your own.  This lets you hide it as you press
 your own finger onto the sensor.  After it lets you in, eat the evidence.
 
 Matsumoto tried these attacks against eleven commercially available
 fingerprint biometric systems, and was able to reliably fool all of
 them.  The results are enough to scrap the systems completely, and to send
 the various fingerprint biometric companies packing.  Impressive is an
 understatement.
 
 There's both a specific and a general moral to take away from this
 result.  Matsumoto is not a professional fake-finger scientist; he's a
 mathematician.  He didn't use expensive equipment or a specialized
 laboratory.  He used $10 of ingredients you could buy, and whipped up his
 gummy fingers in the equivalent of a home kitchen.  And he defeated eleven
 different commercial fingerprint readers, with both optical and capacitive
 sensors, and some with "live finger detection" features.  (Moistening the
 gummy finger helps defeat sensors that measure moisture or electrical
 resistance; it takes some practice to get it right.)  If he could do this,
 then any semi-professional can almost certainly do much much more.
 
 More generally, be very careful before believing claims from security
 companies.  All the fingerprint companies have claimed for years that this
 kind of thing is impossible.  When they read Matsumoto's results, they're
 going to claim that they don't really work, or that they don't apply to
 them, or that they've fixed the problem.  Think twice before believing them.
 
 Matsumoto's paper is not on the Web.  You can get a copy by asking:
 tsutomu@mlab.jks.ynu.ac.jp Tsutomu Matsumoto
 
 Here's the reference:
 T. Matsumoto, H. Matsumoto, K. Yamada, S. Hoshino, "Impact of Artificial
 Gummy Fingers on Fingerprint Systems," Proceedings of SPIE Vol. #4677,
 Optical Security and Counterfeit Deterrence Techniques IV, 2002.
 
 Some slides from the presentation are here:
 slides
 
 Some guy's essay on the uses and abuses of biometrics:
 essay
 
 Biometrics at the shopping center: pay for your groceries with your
 thumbprint.
 free groceries!
 
 Edited by fatalbert on Jan. 01 1970,01:00
 
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 [i]So many dynamos![/i]
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                    | editor  forum whore
 
  
 
 
 Group: Members
 Posts: 0
 Joined: Jan. 2002
 
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                                |  | Posted on: May 17 2002,00:35 |  |        |  Presto!
 Instant content for Detnet's site!
 
 FB, would you mind bookmarking this for a couple weeks and then you can upload it when the site is up?
 
 It's perfect!
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                    | Necromancer  Ace Rimmer
 
 
 
 
 Group: Members
 Posts: 419
 Joined: Feb. 2002
 
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                                |  | Posted on: May 17 2002,00:50 |  |        |  james bond and mission impossible fans have known this for years!
 
 surely you've seen a spy film at some point. they do it all the time in them.
   
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 There'll be time for explanations later... and hopefully, some sex
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                    | editor  forum whore
 
  
 
 
 Group: Members
 Posts: 0
 Joined: Jan. 2002
 
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                                |  | Posted on: May 17 2002,03:55 |  |      |  And they can drive tanks, swim underwater for 3 minutes with no air...
 This is real!
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