Title: DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STANDARDIZATION EFFORTS
1DEPARTMENT OF DEFENSE STANDARDIZATION EFFORTS
- Mike Peters
- Matt Radgens
- CSE 891
- March 31, 2005
2OUTLINE
- WHAT is standardization?
- WHY is standardization needed?
- WHY are we focusing on fingerprints?
- HOW is it applied to fingerprints?
- HOW does it apply to DoD?
- WHO is involved in standardization?
- WHAT progress has been made in fingerprint
standardization? - WHAT is the timetable?
3Exactly what is standardization??
- Biometrics used by ever-growing numbers of
industrial and government organizations - A set of criteria used by vendors worldwide
- Allows everyone to be on the same page
- Standards force vendor products to be compatible
with each other
4Key Issues of Biometric Standardization
- 1) Developing common definitions vocabulary
- Obviously, this will allow people of different
cultures and languages to interact with each other
5Key Issues of Biometric Standardization
- 2) Developing common technical interfaces
- Allows data to be transferred between networks
- Security
- Data exchange
- Conformance testing
6Key Issues of Biometric Standardization
- 3) Common data interchange formats
- What use is data if no one else can use it??
- Therefore, standards for data encoding are needed
7Key Issues of Biometric Standardization
- 4) Testing and reporting standards
- Develops methods to check performance of systems
- Discourages vendors from fudging or skewing data
to sound more favorable - Ex A product may produce low error rates, but a
high failure to enroll rate
8Key Issues of Biometric Standardization
- 5) Legality and societal issues
- Ensures legal requirements are met
- Addresses societal issues as well (ie privacy
issues
9Advantages/Disadvantages of Standardization
- ADVANTAGES
- Easier to communicate with other organizations
- More efficient different systems will not have
to be made to perform the same task - Better reliability and quality vendors will not
produce cheap knock-offs
- DISADVANTAGES
- NONE
- Conclusion Is standardization needed?? YES!!!!
10Why did we select fingerprints?
- Fingerprint is the most common biometric in use
today and has numerous applications
11Different applications of fingerprints
- Government uses
- border crossing systems
- passports
- ID cards, smart cards
12Different applications of fingerprints
- Commercial uses
- Cell phones
- Laptop computers
- Automobiles
- Smart guns
13Fingerprints have often been used by the
Department of Defense in conjunction with other
agencies for victim identification and more
recently, for identifying possible threats to
national security
14DoD uses of fingerprints for identification
- 1993 - FBI siege on Branch Davidian complex in
Waco, TX
David Koresh
15DoD uses of fingerprints for identification
- 1995 - Bombing of federal building in Oklahoma
City, OK
Timothy McVeigh
16DoD uses of fingerprints for identification
17Other DoD uses of fingerprints for identification
- Crash of TWA Flight 800
- Crash of Value Jet plane in Florida
- Southeast Asian tsunami
18Since September 11, the primary objective of DoD
has been to preserve national security and to
capture terrorists and national security threats
19Red Force Personnel
- Definition - Red Force personnel are people on
terrorist watch lists, enemy POWs, and other
possible threats to our national security - Mohamed al Kahtani - The 20th 9/11 hijacker was
discovered after his fingerprints were matched to
those in an international database
20Some fingerprint applications pertaining to
national security include
- National identification cards
- Passports
- Additionally, FBIs IAFIS system receives over
50,000 inquires every day from 17,000 law
enforcement agencies
21Is standardization a high priority for DoD??
- It has come to my attention that DoD
organizations are currently using electronic
systems that do not comply with the
internationally accepted standard to collect
fingerprint data from red force personnel As
a result, the fingerprint data produced is not
interoperable with the FBIs IAFIS and other U.S.
Government and foreign fingerprint systems that
do meet the standard. This problem must be
rectified as soon as possible. In fighting the
global war on terrorism, standardization and
interoperability are key tenets of success
John P. Stenbit, Chief Information Officer, Dept
of Defense, February 2, 2004
22Fingerprint Standardization
- There are challenges with fingerprint
standardization that do not exist in all
biometrics - Three different systems
- Minutiae matching, pattern matching, correlation
(image) matching - If the data/templates are of one form, all
algorithms hardware must be able to handle that
form
23What if there were no standards?
- If you had a minutiae based template, and the
hardware was designed for pattern based data,
either new hardware must be designed to handle
minutiae based data, or a pattern based template
would have to be used - Consequences wasted time, wasted effort, wasted
money - This would be similar to trying to use
Playstation software in an Xbox system
24Other possible problems
- Suppose only one vendor produced equipment
compatible with the data - If they were to go out of business, a whole new
template would need to be created - Consequences time-consuming, expensive,
inconvenient, frustrating!!!
25Other possible problems
- Suppose that a vendor designed equipment better
than what the Department of Defense had - DoD would be unable to use the superior product
- With standards, periodic improvements could be
monitored easily (standards could be changed)
26What organizations are involved?
- Organizations involved in enacting standards
- International Organization for Standardization
(ISO) - American National Standards Institute (ANSI)
- National Institute of Standards and Technology
(NIST)
27Who does DoD need to interact with
- In achieving national and global security, DoD
must coordinate their efforts with - FBI
- CIA
- Department of Homeland Security
- Justice and State Departments
- INTERPOL (International Police Organization)
28Progress made thus far
- Most of the standards DoD has in place deal with
data gathering, coding, and interacting with
other systems
29ANSI/NIST-ITL 1-2000
- AKA Data Format for the Interchange of
Fingerprint, Facial, Scan Mark Tattoo - defines content, units of measurement, and
format used by police organizations that rely on
automated fingerprint ID systems - includes 16 record types used by AFIS to exchange
data
30ANSI/INCITS 377-2004(Finger Pattern Based
Interchange Format Standard)
- Specifies methods of
- creating templates
- utilizing ridge patterns
- Useful for small
- template sizes only
- not used for Red Force
- applications where a
- full fingerprint image is needed
31ANSI/INCITS 378-2004(Finger Minutiae Format for
Data Interchange Standard)
- Defines methods for creating templates based on
minutiae points - Useful when a small template size is needed
(small storage size) - Not for use when
- a full image is
- necessary
32ANSI/INCITS 381-2004(Finger Image-Based Data
Interchange Format Standard)
- This is the standard used to define how to use
full fingerprint images - Not limited by storage size (used for Red Force
applications and latent fingerprint analysis) - Drawbacks besides large storage size needed,
this is a new standard and may not yet be
supported in commercial products
336 Key Issues of Standardization
- Definitions and vocabulary-DoD will abide by
other organizations standards - Technical interfaces - DoD will abide by other
organizations standards - Data interchange formats
- Functional architecture - DoD will abide by other
organizations standards - Testing and reporting
- Legal and society issues - DoD will abide by
other organizations standards
34But much work still needs to be done.
- Most notably, standards need to be developed by
the Department of Defense for testing and
reporting systems - Of course, ANSI, NIST, and ISO will have
standards for testing reporting, but DoD will
need to develop standards based on their own
applications
35Testing and reporting standards
- Need to test performance (accuracy of systems)
- Need to test conformance (does it do what it says
it does??) Conformance standards assure that if
a product claims to adhere to standards, that it
does.
36Tying it all together...
- So what does this have to do with national
security?? - Standards allow different organizations to work
together in creating global databases,
identification cards that can be read worldwide,
and speeding up the process of matching detainee
fingerprints to terrorists - Vendors know what specifications their equipment
needs in order to be used by DoD
37DoD Timetable
- DoD Application Profile
- Standards requirements for supporting military
biometric applications (Red Force) - Proposal Submitted/1st Review May 2004
- Second Draft Completed August 2004
- Final Standard Finished 2nd Quarter 2005
Dates as of June 2004
38DoD Timetable
- Conformance Testing Standards
- Creation of Conformance Test Suite
- Proposal Approved May 2004
- Test Suite prototype completed 4th Quarter 2004
- Test Suite completed 1st Quarter 2005
DoDs plan is to fully deploy biometrics by 2010,
so a complete set of standards would be needed
much earlier in order to pass those standards on
to the vendors and other agencies, allowing them
time to create equipment that will be able to do
the job
39Summary
- Standards make development of biometric systems
and cooperation with other agencies more
efficient and less expensive - Our national security depends on cooperation
between national and international authorities in
capturing terrorist threats - In short Our safety depends on
standardization!!!!
40For more information on standards currently in
place at DoD for other biometrics, check
outhttp//www.biometrics.dod.mil/Documents/zz_Sep
2004_DoD_Biometrics_Standards_Approach05.pdf
41References
- www.biometricgroup.com/reports/public/market_repor
t.htm - www.fbi.gov/hq/lab/disaster/disaster.htm
- DoD Aims to Build Database of PrintsProgram
Targets Possible Terrorists, Marine Corps Times,
Nov. 1, 2004 - Menke, Susan M. Thumbs Up, Government Computer
News, May 24, 2004, Vol. 23 No. 12 - Department of Defense memorandum, Feb. 2, 2004,
www.biometrics.dod/mil - Howarth, Fran. Standardisation issues in
biometrics, Feb. 14, 2005, www.it_analysis.com. - Onley, Dawn S. DOD reveals biometrics plan,
Government Computer News, Sept. 2, 2003. - Woodward, John D, How do you know friend from
foe? Homeland Science Technology, Dec. 2004, - DoD Biometric Standards Development Recommended
Approach, www.biometrics.dod/mil - DoD Biometric Standards Development Recommended
Approach, www.biometrics.dod.mil/Documents/zz_Sep2
004_DoD_Biometrics_Standards_Approach05.pdf - www.cnn.com