Security
A finger on the pulse of security
Jim Fulton of DigitalPersona discusses the advantages of
biometric security for authorising logon to IT systems.
March 2008
Stories about data loss and IT breaches are now a regular
occurrence in today’s media and it seems that no one is safe. The
healthcare sector in particular has been exposed on a number of
occasions in the last year. Recently, it was announced that 4000 –
6000 smartcards had been lost in the NHS.
Although the security risk was played down, the loss of so many
smartcards is clearly a significant and unnecessary drain on
resources. Worries about verifying ID for the proposed medical
database, along with these recent losses, has led organisations to
consider alternatives such as fingerprint biometrics.
The healthcare industry is challenged with maintaining patient
record privacy and providing access to authorised healthcare
professionals, while adhering to government regulations. Current
authentication methods like passwords and smartcards are too reliant
on users for ensuring the security of networks.
Password authentication is often compromised because users tend
to choose passwords that are easy to guess, such as a date of birth
or the name of a pet or a loved one. While experts urge people to
use separate, complex passwords for each application, most people
find that cumbersome and impractical.
Passwords get forgotten (at a cost of £10–£19 per reset by the IT
department) or written down in places where they can be stolen. Or,
people simply use a single, simple password and even share passwords
with others. All of these pose significant risk.
Smartcards are similarly affected by user behaviour. They are
easy to lose (as is illustrated by the NHS incident mentioned above)
and the practice of sharing smartcards is rife — which makes
accountability almost impossible to have.
Indeed, early in 2007, South Warwickshire General Hospital
received a lot of media attention when it was revealed that staff
had regularly been flouting rules governing the use of smartcards.
In busy departments such as accident and emergency, it was taking
users upwards of 90 seconds to log on or off the network. To avoid
delays, senior staff were handing over access via their smartcards
to junior team members, giving them admittance to private
information and leaving systems vulnerable to unauthorised use.
A growing number of people in the healthcare sector are finding
biometrics technology to be a realistic solution to these problems
and more. Many organisations outside the UK are already using
fingerprint biometrics in their day-to-day processes.
Health workers at Sutter Solano Medical Centre, Vallejo,
California, have been using a fingerprint authentication solution
for five years. The 110-bed hospital is using a single sign-on
application and fingerprint readers to access computers and nursing
stations rather than typing in generic usernames and passwords.
In addition to improving authentication and increasing security,
this system has also had a significant impact on efficiency.
Previously it could take five or six minutes for users to log on,
but with fingerprint biometrics, people no longer need to tediously
log on or off.
Users simply touch the fingerprint reader and the PC is unlocked.
While some people had reservations about the use of this technology
in the medical environment these have proven unfounded. The scanners
are able to read fingerprints through the rubber gloves regularly
worn by medical staff.
What makes fingerprint biometrics different from all other
methods of authentication is that fingerprints uniquely link actual
people to individual actions — providing irrefutable accountability.
Biometric authentication relies upon who you are, not what you know
or what you have in your possession. While passwords and smartcards
can be lost, shared or forgotten, this is impossible with a
fingerprint.
This accountability allows medical organisations to know exactly
who has accessed what data, when they accessed it and what they did
with it. In a sector like healthcare where information is highly
sensitive, biometric technology can prove invaluable for helping
organisations to comply with data security legislation.
Organisations in all sectors are acknowledging that traditional
methods of authentication are not secure enough for protecting
sensitive data. Industries like finance and retail in particular are
embracing biometric authentication as the future of network and data
security.
It appears that this cutting-edge technology is now moving into
the mainstream and medical applications mentioned here are just the
tip of the iceberg.
Last year there were reports suggesting that thousands of NHS
patients were receiving the wrong treatment due to errors reading
patient wristbands. Since these reports surfaced, there have been
discussions suggesting that biometrics could be a viable alternative
for patient identification. Other potential applications range from
control of physical access to hospital departments to touch-based
purchases for buying your lunch in the canteen.
While these developments are exciting, the most important point
is that biometric authentication is a vital tool in ensuring that
only authorised users can access sensitive data and that the right
patients get the right treatment.
Jim Fulton, Vice President, DigitalPersona, Inc.
|