2016 Trends

Trend 1: “Mobilizing” security will make it more pervasive and personalized.
As we do more with our phones and increasingly demand anywhere/anytime on-line access, there is the opportunity to better protect these activities while creating a more satisfying, mobile-centric security experience at home, in the office, on the road and on-line.  Over the past several years we’ve begun to turned phones into ID cards, keys and computer logon tokens while plugging security holes that mobility had initially introduced. Moving forward, continuing advancements will enable a new, more secure identity lifestyle built around the convenience and ubiquity of our ever-present mobile devices:

  • Improvements in deployment, onboarding, management and professional service options will help accelerate mobile access adoption, increasing user confidence and capabilities across a growing range of applications. 
  • It will become even easier for travelers to open hotel doors, for college students to enter dorm rooms, and for on-line bank customers to transact with their phones. 
  • Computer and network logon will move even more seamlessly to phones, tablets and laptops. 
  • Visiting healthcare workers, patrolling guards, field inspection teams and factory workers will touch their phones to RFID tags to log their presence and securely monitor processes in the Internet of Things (IoT). 
  • Wearables and other mobile products will join the device ecosystem, giving users even more choices and flexibility.

Trend 2:  Security will move to a much greater focus on the user experience.
Users will continue to be the most important elements and yet weakest links in any security strategy, putting themselves and the people they work and transact with at risk when they don’t do their part.  Advancements in the security experience will play a vital role in closing this gap between security planning and user compliance.  

  • Security technology will no longer define office habits and personal lifestyles but adapt to them while empowering new capabilities, making it easier – and even attractive -- for users to comply with requirements.
  • Users will have more options for presenting secure identities for authentication.  Organizations are now interested having the choice to use any combination of ID cards, phones or other mobile device, or biometric factor such as a fingerprint.  The coming years will bring even more options.
  • Traditional authentication elements like passwords, challenge/response questions and logon tokens will disappear, to be replaced by better ways of securing mobile banking channels, authenticating to corporate data, apps and web services, and accessing healthcare and other sensitive personal information. 

Trend 3:  A new era of secure connected identities will not only make us safer but fuel innovation in how we work, shop and play.
After two decades of advances from simple visual ID badges to smart cards, standards-based access control systems and mobile ID solutions, the industry will now enter its next new chapter:  connected identities for a connected world that are used on a variety of devices for a growing range of existing and new applications. 

  • There will be greater reliance on many digital versions of our identity, used in many different ways across all walks of life. 
  • We will connect our identities to an expanding solution ecosystem for secure access to doors, data and cloud-based services and applications, accelerating the need for unified identity management systems and processes.
  • The more we use these connected identities to secure so many aspects of our lives, the more it will fuel innovation in everything from the way we bank and purchase items to how our businesses, hospitals, schools, manufacturing plants and other facilities are built and operated.
  • Multi-layered security strategies will be critical for protecting these connected identities, and biometrics will offer the potential to eliminate digital identity theft, binding all of these many different digital credentials to their true owners while making security even more convenient.

Trend 4:  There will be closer attention to privacy issues in an increasingly connected and mobile-first world.

  • A growing category of business and consumer products and services will be steadily collecting information about users, creating privacy and security vulnerabilities not only in cyberspace but in the physical world as well. 
  • The IoT will put even greater pressure on privacy.  In a world where everything is connected – objects with other objects, the IoT with other networks -- everything is potentially at risk.   And as the IoT evolves, identity will expand beyond people and their personal identity information to the identity of objects and their authenticity.
  • Protecting personal information will become a critical focus area in the design, deployment and lifecycle of each and every interconnected device, service and application. 

Trend 5:  Security policies and deployment best practices will be as important as technology advancements.

  • More organizations will realize even the most advanced technology is only as secure as the policies and deployment best practices that support them. 
  • The first U.S. digital driver licenses will showcase this challenge, highlighting policy considerations that must accompany the use of secure, authenticated digital identities on mobile devices for issuing, carrying and presenting these and other government credentials.
  • Cost barriers that previously impeded best practices will be overcome as the value of these investments increases.  For example, organizations are more likely to deploy physical access control systems if the same solution for opening doors can also be used for cafeteria purchases, computer logon, time-and-attendance systems and other applications.
  • Vulnerability holes will be plugged as organizations move beyond older technologies to the latest solutions while also adopting best practices for policy and deployment.

This article originally appeared in the January 2016 issue of Security Today.

Featured

  • Achieving Clear Audio

    In today’s ever-changing world of security and risk management, effective communication via an intercom and door entry communication system is a critical communication tool to keep a facility’s staff, visitors and vendors safe. Read Now

  • Beyond Apps: Access Control for Today’s Residents

    The modern resident lives in an app-saturated world. From banking to grocery delivery, fitness tracking to ridesharing, nearly every service demands another download. But when it comes to accessing the place you live, most people do not want to clutter their phone with yet another app, especially if its only purpose is to open a door. Read Now

  • Survey: 48 Percent of Worshippers Feel Less Safe Attending In-Person Services

    Almost half (48%) of those who attend religious services say they feel less safe attending in-person due to rising acts of violence at places of worship. In fact, 39% report these safety concerns have led them to change how often they attend in-person services, according to new research from Verkada conducted online by The Harris Poll among 1,123 U.S. adults who attend a religious service or event at least once a month. Read Now

  • AI Used as Part of Sophisticated Espionage Campaign

    A cybersecurity inflection point has been reached in which AI models has become genuinely useful in cybersecurity operation. But to no surprise, they can used for both good works and ill will. Systemic evaluations show cyber capabilities double in six months, and they have been tracking real-world cyberattacks showing how malicious actors were using AI capabilities. These capabilities were predicted and are expected to evolve, but what stood out for researchers was how quickly they have done so, at scale. Read Now

  • Why the Future of Video Security Is Happening Outside the Cloud

    For years, the cloud has captivated the physical security industry. And for good reasons. Remote access, elastic scalability and simplified maintenance reshaped how we think about deploying and managing systems. Read Now

New Products

  • Camden CM-221 Series Switches

    Camden CM-221 Series Switches

    Camden Door Controls is pleased to announce that, in response to soaring customer demand, it has expanded its range of ValueWave™ no-touch switches to include a narrow (slimline) version with manual override. This override button is designed to provide additional assurance that the request to exit switch will open a door, even if the no-touch sensor fails to operate. This new slimline switch also features a heavy gauge stainless steel faceplate, a red/green illuminated light ring, and is IP65 rated, making it ideal for indoor or outdoor use as part of an automatic door or access control system. ValueWave™ no-touch switches are designed for easy installation and trouble-free service in high traffic applications. In addition to this narrow version, the CM-221 & CM-222 Series switches are available in a range of other models with single and double gang heavy-gauge stainless steel faceplates and include illuminated light rings.

  • Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.

    Connect ONE®

    Connect ONE’s powerful cloud-hosted management platform provides the means to tailor lockdowns and emergency mass notifications throughout a facility – while simultaneously alerting occupants to hazards or next steps, like evacuation.

  • EasyGate SPT and SPD

    EasyGate SPT SPD

    Security solutions do not have to be ordinary, let alone unattractive. Having renewed their best-selling speed gates, Cominfo has once again demonstrated their Art of Security philosophy in practice — and confirmed their position as an industry-leading manufacturers of premium speed gates and turnstiles.