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Date:      Fri, 05 May 2006 14:45:26 +0200
From:      Fredrik Lindberg <fli+freebsd-hackers@shapeshifter.se>
To:        aanton@spintech.ro
Cc:        freebsd-hackers@freebsd.org, Cesar <listas@itm.net.br>
Subject:   Re: Fingerprint Authentication
Message-ID:  <445B48E6.3070000@shapeshifter.se>
In-Reply-To: <445B35EA.5080009@spintech.ro>
References:  <00fb01c66fb2$a8e157c0$0501010a@ironman>	<445A5F48.60303@spintech.ro>	<200605051009.49344.doconnor@gsoft.com.au>	<445AF8AB.9080008@shapeshifter.se> <445B35EA.5080009@spintech.ro>

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Alin-Adrian Anton wrote:
> Fredrik Lindberg wrote:
> 
>  >
>  > The only way as I see it (to even make it possible with UPEKs driver)
>  > is to have a reader at both the remote machine and the client machine
>  > and then capture a BioAPI record at the client machine and have the 
> server verify it. But that involves transferring the record in a secure
>  > way to the server.
>  >
> 
> Or simply have a reader on client side, which if correctly 
> authentificated will issue public-key auth with the server, or sort of.. 
> :) Not really BioAPI auth, but it enables the user to do remote logins 
> by putting the finger on the reader..
> 

But that would sort of defeat the whole purpose of biometric 
authentication and you could really just use public keys instead
which would be a lot faster and easier than scanning your finger
at each login. :)

Fredrik Lindberg



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