While a sharp debate is emerging about whether conventional
biometric technology offers society any significant advantages over
other forms of identification, and whether it constitutes a threat
to privacy, technology is rapidly progressing. Politicians and the
public are still discussing fingerprinting and iris scan, while
scientists and engineers are already testing futuristic solutions.
Second generation biometrics - which include multimodal biometrics,
behavioural biometrics, dynamic face recognition, EEG and ECG
biometrics, remote iris recognition, and other, still more
astonishing, applications - is a reality which promises to overturn
any current ethical standard about human identification. Robots
which recognise their masters, CCTV which detects intentions, voice
responders which analyse emotions: these are only a few
applications in progress to be developed.
This book is the first ever published on ethical, social and
privacy implications of second generation biometrics. Authors
include both distinguished scientists in the biometric field and
prominent ethical, privacy and social scholars. This makes this
book an invaluable tool for policy makers, technologists, social
scientists, privacy authorities involved in biometric policy
setting. Moreover it is a precious instrument to update scholars
from different disciplines who are interested in biometrics and
itswider social, ethical and political implications.
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