Security at your fingertips
Employees in at least one Defense Department office no longer have to remember passwords or personal identification numbers.
DOD's Office of the Assistant Secretary of Defense for Networks and Information Integration is about one year into a pilot program that lets about 1,300 users sign on to their computers and access applications with a fingerprint authentication system.
Officials at DOD chief information officer's office bought 200 fingerprint authentication solutions from DigitalPersona Inc. last summer and, within days, ordered 1,100 more, said Charlie Ahrens, the company's director of government relations.
DigitalPersona's Pro Total Password Automation application and fingerprint recognition hardware allows users to access up to 22 Microsoft Corp. Active Directory applications once the fingerprint reader verifies their identities. The system is interoperable with DOD's Common Access Cards (CAC), which increases overall information assurance levels, said Vance Bjorn, chief technology officer and vice president of DigitalPersona, based in Redwood City, Calif.
"The core security threat our product solves is addressing the human factors of security," such as storing, sharing and remembering passwords, Bjorn said. "It solves the social aspects of security. These types of threats cannot be solved by asking people to choose a longer password or carry a card."
Since the program's inception last summer, help desk calls for password-related assistance have declined by more than 90 percent, Ahrens said.