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From: jinxy on 21 Mar 2010 10:14 On Mar 21, 10:11 am, jinxy <willand...(a)rogers.com> wrote: > On Mar 21, 5:02 am, ToolPackinMama <philnbl...(a)comcast.net> wrote: > > > On 3/20/2010 10:20 PM, jinxy wrote: > > > > I read sometime ago in one of the many pc mags that a gummy bear was > > > squeezed between the thumb and forefinger, then placed on a biometric > > > fingerprint scanner and it allowed access. > > > Link, or it didn't happen. > > Here you are Mrs. Doubtfire:http://www.pcworld.com/article/103535/biometric_security_barely_skind... Read on: http://www.informit.com/guides/content.aspx?g=security&seqNum=319 I guess it happened -J
From: Paul on 21 Mar 2010 10:30
jinxy wrote: > On Mar 21, 10:11 am, jinxy <willand...(a)rogers.com> wrote: >> On Mar 21, 5:02 am, ToolPackinMama <philnbl...(a)comcast.net> wrote: >> >>> On 3/20/2010 10:20 PM, jinxy wrote: >>>> I read sometime ago in one of the many pc mags that a gummy bear was >>>> squeezed between the thumb and forefinger, then placed on a biometric >>>> fingerprint scanner and it allowed access. >>> Link, or it didn't happen. >> Here you are Mrs. Doubtfire:http://www.pcworld.com/article/103535/biometric_security_barely_skind... > > Read on: http://www.informit.com/guides/content.aspx?g=security&seqNum=319 > I guess it happened > -J There are solutions for that. Vascular scanners look a little more deeply into the skin. http://spectrum.ieee.org/computing/it/blood-test Paul |