Barclays adds finger vein scanner for online banking

Sep 8, 2014 | E-commerce and E-retailing

Barclays has revealed a new biometric finger scanner that reads customer vein patterns to gain access to accounts. Watch this Press Association video explaining how the device works below: The bank said the scanner, which can be used by corporate clients from next year, was part of a package of measures it was planning for […]

Barclays has revealed a new biometric finger scanner that reads customer vein patterns to gain access to accounts.
Watch this Press Association video explaining how the device works below:


barclays%20finger%20scanner.jpg
The bank said the scanner, which can be used by corporate clients from next year, was part of a package of measures it was planning for customers which would include wider use of voice recognition technology in personal banking.
Barclays’ reader – developed with Hitachi – scans a finger and identifies unique vein patterns to access accounts, instead of using a password or PIN.
The bank said that unlike finger prints, vein patterns were extremely difficult to spoof or replicate.
It explained: “The scanned finger must be attached to a live human body in order for the veins in the finger to be authenticated.
“Barclays will not hold the user’s vein pattern and there will be no public record of it.”
Vein recognition technology is used by some banks in Japan and elsewhere at cash machines but Barclays said it is the first bank globally to use it for significant account transactions.
Ashok Vaswani, chief executive of Barclays personal and corporate banking, said it was a response to the fact that criminals were becoming more sophisticated.
“It will be game-changing for UK businesses and consumers.Ultimately, I hope this will pave the way for other institutions to adopt equally robust technology in the fight against online crime,” he said.
Barclays launched voice recognition biometrics for private banking clients last year.
It said it was exploring a number of opportunities to expand its use that could include similar technology for mobile tablets, which is the fastest growing area for European banks, or at cash machines.

All topics

Previous editions