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- Path: sparky!uunet!cis.ohio-state.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!news.acns.nwu.edu!telecom-request
- Date: Fri, 25 Dec 92 11:54 CST
- From: guy@ihlpw.att.com
- Newsgroups: comp.dcom.telecom
- Subject: Re: Sprint Dis-Cards
- Message-ID: <telecom12.918.7@eecs.nwu.edu>
- Organization: TELECOM Digest
- Sender: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- Approved: Telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Submissions-To: telecom@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Administrivia-To: telecom-request@eecs.nwu.edu
- X-Telecom-Digest: Volume 12, Issue 918, Message 7 of 9
- Lines: 45
-
- > Pat writes [lots of stuff about credit law deleted]:
-
- >> their system, and they'll have to fix it in a lawful manner. Why not
- >> consider using 'voice prints'? I think Sprint has such a thing they
- >> were testing, and 'voice prints' are almost foolproof, no? PAT]
-
- > No. The basic problem of how to identify users of remote systems is
- > one that lots of folks are trying to solve. The current state of the
-
- According to the following news clips, we may be using voice prints
- for ATM access in a little more that a year:
-
- AT&T IN THE NEWS *** ATMs LISTEN -- Someday, perhaps as soon as early
- 1994, account holders may be talking back to their automated teller
- machine -- and it won't be in disgust. AT&T and its computer unit,
- NCR, the world's largest maker of computerized bank tellers, are
- developing a new machine that identifies clients by voice, rather than
- by passwords punched into a keyboard. The voice-identification system
- being tested by NCR and AT&T will make it more difficult for thieves
- to use stolen ATM cards, most of which are now easily decipherable by
- machines that read the card's magnetic strip and therefore the
- password. The new NCR automated tellers, set to be widely tested by
- banks in mid-1993, use voice-identification technology and "smart
- cards" that have no magnetic strips, both developed by AT&T Bell
- Laboratories.
-
- Previously, voice-identification technology had been hampered by
- laborious "maturing the template," teaching the computer to identify
- the unique characteristics of a particular human voice so that it was
- not fooled by similar voices. AT&T technology, said John Gray,
- assistant vice president of the NCR unit responsible for ATM machines,
- takes fewer than eight attempts to "mature" the machine and can be
- used by rattled, flu-stricken customers. [NY Times 12/9]
-
- "We're testing the idea of using speech verification to get access
- into your account," said Diane Wetherington, president of AT&T Smart
- Cards. Jim Adamson, vice president of NCR's self-service and
- financial systems division, said it means increased security.
- "Magnetic-strip cards are fairly easy to reproduce, and fraudulent
- withdrawals made using counterfeit cards cost banks millions of
- dollars per year," Adamson said. The systems can be installed in
- existing NCR teller machines. AT&T plans to make the card "interface"
- available to other terminal developers as well. [NY Newsday 12/9]
-
-