Contactless fingerprinting technology (CFP) was described in a government-funded report as an attempt to gather and add fingerprints to those gathered via wet-ink process and then, in a "touchless" scan, verify claimed identify and, a bigger challenge, identify their owners without additional clues.
Although an early source of this technology, which worked with phone cameras (and not needing additional hardware), opened in 2003 and closed in 2011,[1] others in this space are still, several years later, using the words "one of the first.
The whitepaper noted that the Canadian Border Services Agency was planning to utilize a combination of facial recognition and fingerprints.
A pending court case defined failures of even 1% to be "high risk" if it results in denials of government benefits.
Next come a pair from an inventor with 2 entries; one had 800 employees worldwide when, for reasons of mismanagement, it went bankrupt and was absorbed by another firm.