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Biometric technology will be defined in terms a (:+1:What Makes a Good…
Biometric technology will be defined in terms a
:+1: User
Interaction
or
involvement
with Biometric Technology
Active
Passive
:+1:What Makes a Good Biometric?
:star:Deployability
Infrastructure requirements
Minimum client/server system requirements
Environmental conditions
Deployment methodology supported by the hardware and software selection
Device size
:star:Invasiveness of the technology
:star:Technology costs
Deployment costs
Support
Device cost
:star:Maturity of the technology
:star:Ease of use
FRR
SW
Ergonomics
:star:Time it takes for the user to become habituated
:star:User acceptance
:sparkles:Number of attempted authentications
:point_up:Above average
:one: High number of sequential successes
:two:the having great success with the biometric and probably very accepting of the technology
:two:verify the FAR
:one: High number of sequential failures followed by a success
:two:would initially point to someone who would be less accepting of the technology
:two:other factors need to be examined
:point_up:Average
:one: The user may have been undecided about the technology and trying to work with it
:two:This user needs additional support and assistance
:one: higher number of successes than failures
:two:very probable that the user is accepting of the technology
:one: higher number of failures than successes
:two:it could be said that this user is accepting of the technology as well
:point_up:Below average
:one:eliminate external activities that may have reduced the user's average
:two:
Positive answers
>> the collected data to be invalid and not a reliable
:two:
questions do not explain
>> the number of failed versus successful authentications needs to be examine
:three:high number of successes to failures
:four: user accepted but not use his computer
:four: user like it but not authenticate that often
:four: user not like it but he find it easy
:three:high number of failures to successes
:four: user accepted but it is difficult
:four: user not accepted and not trying to use it properly
:four: user not like it and this lead to poor interaction
:sparkles:Number of times fallback authentication mechanisms are used
:one:Lack of time and patience to become habituated
:one:Poor instruction in use
:one:User is not suitable for using the chosen biometric
:one:Frequent failure of the biometric hardware
:sparkles:Number of calls to help desk
User un decided
User Accepted
:+1:What Makes a Good Biometric for Network Security?
The technology is deployable and supportable
The technology is not invasive and requires the user to actively submit to its use
The total technology costs provide a suitable ROI (return on investment)
The technology is mature and reliable
Users find it easy to use
Users quickly become habituated to the device
Users willingly accept the biometric device