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Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes

By | August 23, 2010, 7:49 AM PDT

Biometrics has taken the U.S. Department of Defense by storm, both as a tool to fight war on the battlefield and as a way to make its business practices more efficient.

According to Myra Gray, director of the Army’s Biometrics Identity Management Agency, biometrics has become “an integral part” of a soldier’s mission, allowing troops to identify potential threats and confirm the link between name and face.

“You can identify an individual and associate him with certain actions,” Gray said in an American Forces Press Service report. “You can figure out who someone associated with and what they have been involved in. You can link events such as an [improvised explosive device] at one place and a protest at another. You build a picture of what has gone on.”

Biometrics, of course, is the science of identifying a person by using intrinsic (and hopefully unique) physical and behavioral characteristics. The military uses iris, facial, palm and voice characteristics in the field.

But now the Pentagon is bringing biometrics back for use at home. Just like in the combat zone — where biometrics are used to grant people access to secure facilities — the Defense department is using them in its own facilities as a type of universal access: every member of the military, their families and civilian employees have a common access identification card that is embedded with their fingerprints.

For example:

  • At Eglin Air Force Base, Fla., the Air Force uses a device that scans hand prints to clear veterans who are receiving treatment at the Veterans Affairs clinic for access to the base hospital.
  • At Fort Belvoir, Va., the Army uses iris scanning technology to provide keyless entry to sensitive areas.
  • The Navy uses biometrics equipment to confirm identifies as they board foreign vessels.

But biometric technology is becoming better, and the military is already experimenting with new uses, such as the ability to scan people on the fly without requiring them to touch anything or stop moving.

Imagine such tech on the battlefield: safer border crossings and other points of entry.

Imagine such tech in a civilian airport: no more lengthy security lines.

Moreover, the Pentagon is using biometrics to speed up business processes. The technology is being used to streamline record-keeping, improve information-sharing between departments and agencies and combat fraud throughout the U.S. government.

Just think: medical records, employee records, social security records, and so forth. It’s a move to centralize security within the U.S. government and bolster it at the same time.

Photo: U.S. soldiers use biometrics on volunteers to become security guards in Taji, Iraq. (Steve Czyz/U.S. Air Force)

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Andrew Nusca

About Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca is the editor of SmartPlanet.

Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca

Editor

Andrew Nusca is editor of SmartPlanet and an associate editor for ZDNet. Previously, he worked at Money, Men's Vogue and Popular Mechanics magazines. He holds degrees from the Columbia University Graduate School of Journalism and New York University. He based in New York but resides in Philadelphia.

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Andrew Nusca

Andrew Nusca
Andrew Nusca does not hold any investments in the companies he covers.
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RE: Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes
This sounds like another hold for the Tea Party movement to get a foothold. Watch out.
Posted by psoucheray@...
23rd Aug 2010
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RE: Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes
So, what happens when the person doesn't have a hand so there are no finger prints, or has lost his or her eyes and has no iris, or has had his voice damaged/injured so that he or she may be able to even speak? What is the pentagon doing about those individuals? The system must have multiple biometric methods as least - does it?
Posted by philljenkins
23rd Aug 2010
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RE: Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes
The capability to force people to take the "666" mark in order to buy and sell is getting closer.
Posted by st5vJVC2um
23rd Aug 2010
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RE: Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes
Selabkram -- It's already hear. It happened when democare passed.

What about privacy? Soon Big bro and Big Sis will have cameras everywhere watching everything you do, and listening to everything you say.

It's really out of hand. Just because you can do something does not mean you should.
Posted by Albee_Freeoneday
23rd Aug 2010
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RE: Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes
OK, the religious nuts & the paranoiacs are still there.
Biometric ID techs are neither mutually exclusive nor do they preclude the use of traditional ID methods. For the military in particular, major disabilities are an identifier by themselves - there's only so many hand-less, eyeless or mute people you have to worry about. Whether it's a security situation or not, the ID card (or something like it) is likely to be around for the foreseeable future. Life will be less convenient for people with major disabilities, but that's nothing new.
Posted by hoodedswan
23rd Aug 2010
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RE: Pentagon using biometrics for smarter warfare, facilities, business processes
Haven't you seen Gattaca and Minority Report? The /bis/b truth in fiction.
Posted by Sparkerama
24th Aug 2010
0 Votes
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There is no need for the Mark of the Beast
Who needs a mark on you when you are your own source of identification?
Posted by Dr_Zinj
30th Aug 2010
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