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New DHS Border Plan Scrutinized
January 12, 2004
By Dennis Fisher
As the Department of Homeland Security works to iron out wrinkles in its new biometrics-based, border-entry program, experts familiar with the technology and the government's efforts are raising questions about the project's viability.
The program, known as United States Visitor and Immigrant Status Indicator Technology (US VISIT) and announced last week, is designed to give the government a better picture of who is entering the country, while collecting biometric data that can be stored and used later to identify visa holders.
As part of the process, foreigners arriving at US-VISIT-capable airports and seaports have each of their index fingers scanned and a digital photo of their faces taken. This data is stored in a database, along with the person's visa number, and compared against so-called watch lists of known terrorists and criminals. Each time the person enters the country, another database search is done to see if any new information about the visitor has accumulated since his or her last visit.
The project is an extension of one initiated at the old Immigration and Naturalization Service and used by the INS and U.S. embassies abroad, called IDENT. However, the project, which attempted to link criminal records with immigration entry/exit records, ran into numerous challenges, not the least of which was an inability to search the FBI's national fingerprint database.
As for US-VISIT, DHS officials said the department plans to investigate a number of options for the nationwide rollout.
We're looking at all kinds of biometric technologies—anything that's out there, said Mike Milne, a spokesman for the Customs and Border Protection unit of DHS, in Washington, which runs the US-VISIT program. This is the first step in a long journey. We're going to look at different technologies for the exit process as well. That's just as important because if people don't check out on time, we need to find out whether we should go looking for them and whether we've learned any new information on them since they arrived.
The DHS hopes to have picked the vendors to deploy the system by May.
While admirable, biometrics experts say, US-VISIT faces serious technical challenges.
The reason it's so difficult is that you have to turn an analog process into a digital one, said Ram Banerjee, vice president of global solutions at ActivCard Corp., a smart-card and biometric vendor based in Fremont, Calif. It's enormously difficult. What's been announced [by the DHS] isn't necessarily the best way to go about it. There isn't a fingerprint application out there that can do the one-to-many searches in 15 or 30 seconds. They can't do it in real time. [If they do,] they're going to get a lot of false positives.
Another issue observers have raised is the difficulty of connecting the DHS system to the existing law-enforcement and government infrastructure. To work at maximum efficiency, the US-VISIT system will need to be hooked into systems such as the FBI's Automated Fingerprint Identification System, as well as databases from airlines and overseas embassies.
The data is going to come from lots of different sources. The capture, exchange and management of that much data from so many different sources is unprecedented, said Dennis Carlton, director of Washington operations for International Biometric Group, a New York-based consulting company that works with the federal government and the transportation industry. The challenge is coming up with an efficient architecture to get the identity.
Copyright (c) 2004 Ziff Davis Media Inc. All Rights Reserved.
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Posted on Monday, 12 January 2004 @ 21:09:13 EST by phoenix22
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