Sunday - June 26, 2005 Filed in:
Positioning
| Security
| Private
Equity

With homeland security as a hot
topic these days, LaserCard in Mountain View
(NASDAQ: LCRD, formerly known as Drexler
Technologies) quietly continues to ship millions
of unique memory cards as the foundation for
"Green" cards and National ID cards to US,
Italian, and Canadian governments and others. In
addition to its incredible resistance against
wear and tear (we punched holes in it and it
still read successfully) and unique security
features, the LaserCard stores an impressive
2.8M of personal and biometric data.
Fingerprints, retina scans, voice encoding or
whatever becomes the prevalent set of biometric
verifiers, can be combined with visual
authentication to ensure the holder of the card
is indeed the one presenting himself. All these
attributes can be stored on the card and read
offline without the need for centralized
databases. So why is homeland security not using
this card to it's fullest potential? Why does it
waste time on privacy debates with regards to
centralized storage? Why, four years after 911
are we still not able to verify a persons real
identity?
Tags: LaserCard, Security, Homeland Security, Biometrics, IDentity