Finally we come to the most understandable
area of massive, and extensive bio metric technology consumption –civilian inhabitant’s classification.
Governments always like to keep track of their citizens in ways that keep convinced
people from easily stealing and presumptuous someone else’s individuality or
from simply slipping through the cracks and being hard to ID.
This is where bio metrics comes in and in frequent countries it’s being used for both cross border explorer security and for general classification of an entire citizen population.
An example of the previous can be found in the joint U.S/Canada NEXUS program, which offers individual speed ed up border journey measures to American or Canadian citizens who opt for a bio metric ID tracker in their passports after they have been vetted as having clean special records.
With the concluding bio metric ID use, involving general in-country populations, we have a mammoth example in the Indian Government’s UID (Universal recognition) program, which is aimed at creating a fully encoded bio metric ID card for every single one of India’s 1.2 billion citizens. When completed in the next few years, this will be the single largest application
of bio metric technology in
the World.
As you can see, bio metrics is here to stay. The technology behind it still needs some modification and existing identification actions are still too well well-established to disappear any time soon but the long term trends are clearly showing that the future of ID is in this powerful and protected system of identifying people.
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