Skip to main content

SESAMES 2014: What the winner said

The SESAMES Awards 2014 rewarded the best innovations in the world of secure payments, identification and mobility at a gala evening in the magnificent surroundings of the Salle Wagram in the heart of Paris. CARTES Daily News asked some of the winners for their reactions...
November 4, 2014 Read time: 2 mins
SESAMES Award Winners

The SESAMES Awards 2014 rewarded the best innovations in the world of secure payments, identification and mobility at a gala evening in the magnificent surroundings of the Salle Wagram in the heart of Paris. CARTES Daily News asked some of the winners for their reactions...


“I’m very happy and I’m sure the team will be, too. Winning brings us visibility and communication of our idea, which is very important.”

Benoit Berthie,
product development director,
Oberthur Technologies

“I’m really happy. We’ve taken part in these awards for several years and never won. It will highlight what we are doing and encourage people to come and talk to us and look at the demonstration of the product.”
Martin Bergenwall, head of the mobile security business division,
Inside Secure

“For me it’s a great pleasure to accept this award. It is a big project, a revolution in our industry. It has been a lot of effort for a lot of people! And it has been very successful – the take-up has been amazing. Introducing the system was anything but easy – but it is fantastic for us to win such a prestigious award.”
Sebastien Losq, head of customer technology, Transport for London

“The Emirates ID Authority team couldn’t be here because they had last-minute problems and are in Cairo, but I texted my daily contact and he said ‘Great!’”
Stephanie de Labriolle, marketing & communication consultant,
Secure Identity Alliance

“One of my team came to me with the idea for certified customer reviews. And it had two great aspects: it was simple and it solved a problem. I sent my team text messages and they’re all going ‘Whoopee!’ They are all very happy.”
Nicolas Kozakiewicz, head of R&D, Worldline

“Our product has two different uses – an anti-fraud solution and enabling companies to engage with their customers. To win two awards with the same product is great. Are awards like this helpful? I believe so.”
Giorgio Miano, VP sales for enterprise and intelligent solutions, Syniverse

Related Content

  • Taking the hassle out of parking
    April 29, 2015
    A team of senior electrical and computer engineers from Rice University in Houston, Texas, has developed a new parking technology called ParkiT, with the aim of making it easier to find a parking space in a crowded car park. The team claims the new system is cheaper than sensor technology currently being used and would provide car park managers and attendants with real time information on available parking spaces. That information could then be shared with drivers through electronic signs or a driver-fri
  • Morpho highlights secure pauments and biometrics data
    November 19, 2013
    Morpho (Safran) is focusing on “the art of digital security” at CARTES 2013 showing visitors how its “latest solutions transform personal data” into high-tech, secure and fully protected pieces of information that can be “used in our customers’ businesses”. The Morpho (Safran) stand is highlighting the company’s latest ideas on how to make payment and biometrics data secure and easy to use; on fast, convenient and multi-functional transport and ticketing; on the best way to make eBanking and online shoppi
  • Walk | Don’t Walk – actually, just Don’t Walk
    March 17, 2025
    In 1925 a traffic ordinance was introduced in Los Angeles. The 100-year anniversary is significant because, transportation historian Peter Norton suggests, the law in effect set the blueprint for car-dependency across the US. Adam Hill asks him how…
  • “It's vital to encourage more newcomers into ITS from a broad range of backgrounds”
    November 27, 2023
    The intelligent transportation industry has a need for young people and the structured learning and practical experience of apprenticeships might help attract them, thinks Alistair Gollop, founder of ITS Now