Biometrics have a bright future in mobile banking, just not today says Dr Nick van der Merwe, director of technology and business development at Muvoni Biometric & Smartcard Solutions (MBSS).
There has been a rising trend in fingerprint biometric technology in the latest wave of smartphones. Van der Merwe believes the mobile biometric arena is not at a transactional banking level quite yet as even the latest devices cannot capture biometrics on the same level as traditional biometric devices – at least not to the degree where one would feel confident enough to trust their sensitive financial information with.
“It’s not nearly as accurate as traditional devices, which are developed especially to capture fingerprints,” he says. “Even though these smartphones might be about 80% accurate, that is still far from good enough.”
According to Van der Merwe, for a transactional mobile biometric system to work, one would still need to adopt a biometrics information database. “Currently the Department of Home Affairs has all the population’s fingerprint information on file and the banks are utilising that database. To implement this kind of biometrics system, banks would have to do the verification once off with the likes of Home Affairs and only then can they store it on the bank’s system,” he says.
Yet, even if the latest devices become good enough, the problem with mobile adoption in countries like South Africa is that a great portion of the mobile market is not able to afford the latest high-end devices. “It will take time for affordable lower-end phones to adopt this level of technology. Devices capable of sufficiently capturing biometrics will become cheaper and open up to wide-scale adoption,” Van der Merwe says. “Only then will it be viable for banks to roll this out securely on a mass transactional level.”
Although feasibility is not a concern, an der Merwe bVelieves that the widespread adoption of mobile biometrics by banks is inevitable. “There’s no question that this is coming. The banks themselves are already utilising biometrics more and more at a branch level and I would say in the next five years or so we will be seeing biometrics becoming way more prevalent at a smartphone level.”
While there are numerous types of biometrics, ranging from voice recognition to iris detection, van der Merwe is adamant that nothing quite surpasses the efficacy of fingerprint biometrics in this day and age.
“Fingerprints, when applied correctly, outperform all current biometrics in terms of both effectiveness and cost. The problem with putting it together with mobile devices is that it needs to be properly built into the device with credible technology that captures the full extent of a fingerprint,” says Van der Merwe. “These are exciting times in the biometrics arena with the increasing availability of affordable and viable technology. The next five to ten years, will see great changes in combating fraud, especially in mobile banking. The banks could possibly opt to use multiple authentication methods for their mobile banking environment?”