Tapping into Touch-free Digital
Experiences with trusted-Identity technologies
- By Stephen Carney
- Jun 01, 2021
As the world glimpses a return to more “normal”
life, one change seems likely to endure: the preference
for touch-free digital experiences. The global
pandemic both accelerated the world’s digital
transformation and re-oriented it to a model that
reduces or eliminates physical touch-points and in-person contact.
Now, the same touch-free trusted-identity technologies that
are being used to help re-open the workplace are proliferating
across a wide variety of use cases that benefit from the safety,
security, convenience and efficiency of contact-free interactions
with both the physical and digital worlds.
Touch-free identity technology is being adopted in an extensive
variety of enterprise applications, from automating physical distancing
and contact tracing protocols to simplifying how users
enter secured areas and access print resources and other building
services. They also are enabling employees to work securely from
home and giving consumers greater confidence in financial transactions
ranging from online banking to verifying the authenticity
of high-value collectible items at the point of sale.
The New Hybrid Workplace
Mobile solutions used for access control and building management
are creating safer, more secure, and more convenient experiences
in the modern workplace. They are also reinforcing the role
of trusted identities as a linchpin for more efficient, touch-free
and resilient building environments—especially during the COVID-
19 pandemic.
Mobile IDs carried on smartphones and other devices eliminate
the need to physically touch cards, readers or keypads. Users
present their smartphone to a reader to open doors, gates and
elevators. They also provide touch-free access to time-and-attendance
terminals, cashless vending machines, and printers, computers
and workstations. Additionally, the ability to issue mobile
ID credentials over the air removes the need for person-to-person
ID card issuance or revocation of physical cards for both employees
and visitors. And, ultra wide-band (UWB) and other technologies
will take convenience even further in the future.
Visitor management has also been adapted to a more hands-off
experience. Cloud-based solutions limit face-to-face interaction
through self-service check-in. The badging process itself no
longer requires visiting a crowded issuance center with cloud-based
solutions that enable cards to be designed and printed
from any office or satellite campus, on any device via a web interface.
The iconic Arcos Bosques Tower 1 in Mexico City offers one
example of the appeal of the touch-free access experience. HID
Global’s smart card readers and mobile access solution deliver
integrated access control capabilities for approximately 3,500 tenants
and visitors that pass through the tower’s 32 elevators and 16
turnstiles each day. Those who are using the mobile access capability
say they prefer it to using physical cards.
“Accessing the building by simply presenting a mobile phone makes a lot of sense as we look for ways to
eliminate touching things during the global
pandemic,” said Santiago Morett, project
manager with the company’s building
management firm, Servicon. “HID Mobile
Access has given us touch-less entry
and safer building security, which is more
important than ever for our tenants.”
Other touch-less workplace experiences
are enabled through wearable wristbands.
One example is the Nymi band which,
once authenticated, continuously authenticates
the identity of the user until it’s removed
from the wrist. This delivers zerotrust
security principles and access control
using convenient fingerprint and heartbeat
biometrics to users seeking touch-less authentication.
Organizations that want these touch-free
access experiences in both the physical
and digital workplaces are increasingly
taking a cloud-based approach to
how they issue and manage the associated
identity credentials. This unifies, automates,
and simplifies identity issuance and
management at a single facility or across
any number of distributed office or remote
work locations. While reducing the
need for in-person interactions to issue
and manage identities, this approach also
improves the visitor experience through
reduced wait times and the ability to use
self-service badging kiosks.
Safe and Healthy Campuses
University campuses have their own
unique requirements. According to Mark
Brown, director of Business Services Technology
at Vanderbilt University, student
safety is the number one priority. “We
need to make sure that students are in a
safe environment.” The university is using
HID’s mobile access credential technology
so the university’s credential holders
to use their smartphone, tablet or wearable
device to unlock doors.
In addition to delivering building security,
management and utilization benefits,
wireless technologies and Bluetooth
beacons have been integral to implementing
automated physical distancing and
contact tracing policies during the global
pandemic. Bay State College in Boston
and Taunton, MA, safely brought its
students back to its campuses using a
digitized contact tracing solution that
includes simple HID Bluetooth BEEKs
Beacons in the form of badge holder to
provide real-time location services. Jeffrey
Myers, chief information officer with
Bay State College, stated “HID BEEKS
beacons are carried by each person on
campus as part of our solution that
enabled us to safely resume in-person
classes and keep our campus operational
should isolated parts of our community
find themselves infected.”
Additionally, beacons and cloud-based
solutions can provide rule-based physical
distancing management for immediate insights
and alerts that help keep employees
compliant with safety and sanitation requirements
to ease the burden of tracking
new health and safety procedures.
Government Services
Governments are tapping into the touch-free
experience through digital versions of
mandatory national identity documents.
For example, the government of Argentina
has accorded full legal equivalence
to the smartphone version of its national
identity credential, which it offers within
a mobile app to its citizens. Citizens who
download the app on their mobile devices
can request appointments, receive health
information and access credentials such as
their driver license.
Mobile credential technology is also
poised to support the arrival of vaccine
passports in Europe. One government is
seeking to use NFC technology and smart
cards to validate immunization status.
This offers a more secure and accurate
way to validate vaccination status than
easily forged paper cards.
Tapping the card to a mobile device
establishes a secure connection to a health
authority’s web service, which sends back a
web page displaying real-time vaccination
information. These types of solutions fully
comply with General Data Protection Regulation
(GDPR) privacy requirements, and
each time the card is read, its authenticity
can be validated using the advanced dynamic
cryptographic features of the smart
card’s embedded microprocessor.
Consumer Applications
Among the biggest adopters of the touch-free experience is the
banking segment. Consumers have embraced the convenience of
online and mobile transactions at traditional banks and the latest
all-digital financial institutions, especially during the global health
crisis. The latest authentication solutions protect data and transactions
while delivering a seamless experience for the consumer and
maximum flexibility for banks. This includes the option of cloud-based
authentication services that remove the complexity of providing
multi-factor authentication to a growing and diverse user
population while also offering the convenience and efficiency of
centralized regulatory compliance audits. These authentication options
include mobile apps that allow users to verify access requests
and transactions in an intuitive and easy-to-use manner.
Authentication is also important to consumers purchasing
rare collectible items, and this has become a touch-less experience,
as well. Professional Coin Grading Service (PCGS), a division
of Collectors Universe, embeds HID’s trusted NFC tags into its
coins and the sonically sealed, tamper-evident holders into which
they are encapsulated.
“We want collectors to be confident that when they have
PCGS-authenticated, -graded, and -encapsulated coins and
banknotes in their hands, they are holding an authentic and valuable
collector’s item,” said Brett Charville, president of PCGS.
With a simple tap of a phone to the coin, the collector authenticates
the coin through HID’s cloud authentication service,
in real time. Each tap generates a unique cryptographic one-time
URL that automatically launches Collectors Universe’s proprietary
PCGS Cert Verification app or opens a web browser to
display information about the coin’s or banknote’s authenticity.
Since each tap generates a unique URL, the information cannot
be cloned or manipulated by a counterfeiter.
A third example of today’s new touch-free experiences for consumers
is the completely contact-free dining experiences offered by
UK-based qiiosk Ltd. through its MenuTile offering. HID NFC Tags
facilitate the end-user interactions with qiiosk’s placards. Restaurant
goers simply scan the QR code or tap the embedded NFC tag with an
NFC-enabled smartphone or tablet to securely access menus, ordering,
and payment options. Customers can access up-to-the-minute
menus and place orders for in-person, takeaway, or delivery dining.
Moving forward, biometrics are poised to become even more
mainstream to further advance the security and convenience of
these touch-free experiences. Whether it is opening doors, printing
documents, interacting with connected buildings and digital
consumer services, or implementing physical distancing and contact
tracing protocols, touch-free trusted-identity technologies
have proven that they are here to stay
This article originally appeared in the May June 2021 issue of Security Today.