Magazine Button
Thales boosts biometric matching performance while halving environmental impact

Thales boosts biometric matching performance while halving environmental impact

Green TechnologyMore News
Single human barefoot footprint of left foot in brown yellow sand beach background, summer vacation or climate change concept, copy space

With Gemalto’s commercial off-the-shelf FPGA solution, Thales allows the number of servers used to be cut in half and dramatically limit the overall carbon footprint.

Thales, a world leader in digital security, is using innovative assets from the aerospace industry to boost its Biometric Matching System (BMS) performance while reducing the environmental impact. The BMS is the heart of government digital identification systems.

Introducing interoperability with its border management system requires multiple processing of hundreds of millions of biometric database records within one to two seconds.

To perform data comparison at this scale Gemalto, a Thales company, is applying commercial off-the-shelf Field-Programmable Gate Array (FPGA) technology, originally designed for ultra-low latency applications in high performance computing (HPC) environments in financial and scientific industries, which is compatible with any server and cloud.

Specifically, Gemalto uses these FPGA boards for matching hundreds of millions of biometric fingerprint templates which are digital signatures, created from fingerprint images. This proven solution also allows for much faster data processing and greater matching accuracy, while at the same time limiting infrastructure costs and cutting carbon emissions. Depending on server and system specification, it can require up to 75% less servers and energy overall.

Gemalto’s Automated Fingerprint Identification System (AFIS) and Automated Biometric Identification System (ABIS) are scalable and customisable solutions, providing a range of functionalities for processing, editing, searching, retrieving, and storing fingerprint, palm print, face and iris images and biographic subject records.

With FPGA, ABIS makes it easier for government agencies to run very large and complex multi-biometric solutions with remarkable matching accuracy and speed, enabling states to better protect and serve their citizens.

“Our FPGA based solution can cut data centre investment and space overall by more than a half, while reducing CO2 emissions by around 50%. Gemalto technology brings new options for governments wishing to prioritise environmental sustainability, without in any way impacting national security.” says Youzec Kurp – SVP Identity and Biometric Solutions at Thales.

“The alternative of a pure ‘Central Procession Unit’ based approach for biometric data matching requires massive computing capacity – even, in some cases, up to four times more servers than Gemalto’s approach – to perform the same transaction.”

Click below to share this article

Browse our latest issue

Intelligent CISO

View Magazine Archive