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Washington school district considering fingerprint program

Wednesday, May 25, 2011

Spokane Public Schools in Washington is rolling out a pilot program that would replace lunch cards with fingerprints. The idea is to make the lunch line move faster.

“Kids don’t have to remember their ID card. There can be issues when somebody borrows somebody else’s card,” said a school spokesperson.


The image of the finger isn’t saved but instead just the measurements. That way when a child comes through the lunch line he places his finger on a machine which identifies the student, his lunch account and calculates how much money is in the account.

The program is secure and there are several safeguards in place, the spokesperson added. “All of our programs are password protected and the image is not saved on the computer.”

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BIO-key International announced the results of tests performed on its biometric software and matching algorithm at a hospital over the past three months.

The results, which included 251,447 attempts to use biometrics for login to the testing system, ranked between 99.34% and 100% accuracy with zero false matches. This is a near 100% true accept rate and one staff member that logged in 5,999 in November without a single rejection.

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A European Education Campus Card Association pilot program seeking to provide standards for campus card issuance and usage across the continent has successfully been completed, the association reports.

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The government in Orissa, a state on the East coast of India, has introduced biometric smart cards to replace ration cards that will be used in a pilot with its citizens in the Rayagada district, according to a SiFy article. The new program was developed in a joint effort between the Orissa government and the United Nations World Food Program in hopes of improving the Targeted Public Distribution System.

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Ideal Innovations, a developer of biometric solutions, has been awarded a contract valued at $30.5 million by the U.S. Army’s Biometric Task Force, according to a Washington Business Journal article.

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