Part I: Enabling Security through User Authentication
Current Use of User Authentication
The Evolving Technological Landscape
What is Really Being Achieved with User Authentication?
Part II: Authentication Approaches
Intrusive Authentication Approaches
Transparent Techniques
Multibiometrics
Biometric Standards
Part III: System Design, Development and Implementation Considerations
Theoretical Requirements of a Transparent Authentication System
Implementation Considerations in Ubiquitous Networks
Evolving Technology and the Future for Authentication
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No existing user-authentication approaches provide universally strong user authentication, while also taking into account the human factors of good security design. A reevaluation is therefore vitally necessary to ensure user authentication is relevant, usable, secure and ubiquitous.
This groundbreaking text/reference examines the problem of user authentication from a completely new viewpoint. Rather than describing the requirements, technologies and implementation issues of designing point-of-entry authentication, the book introduces and investigates the technological requirements of implementing transparent user authentication – where authentication credentials are captured during a user’s normal interaction with a system. This approach would transform user authentication from a binary point-of-entry decision to a continuous identity confidence measure.
Topics and features:
This unique work is essential reading for all researchers interested in user authentication, biometric systems and behavioural profiling. Postgraduate and advanced undergraduate students of computer science will also benefit from the detailed coverage of the theory of authentication in general, and of transparent authentication in particular.
Dr. Nathan Clarke is an Associate Professor of Information Security and Digital Forensics at the University of Plymouth, U.K., and an Adjunct Associate Professor with Edith Cowan University in Western Australia.
From the reviews:
“This book is worth reading. ... Clarke provides an architectural description with many tradeoffs that may help in building such a system. This book, with its clear focus on transparent authentication, brings together a lot of ideas and insights.” (A. Mariën, ACM Computing Reviews, March, 2012)
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