Until recently, criminals were the main concern of customers using the internet to make electronic payments. The public believed that malware and hacking were the domain of people on the wrong side of the law. The revelation that many governments and their secret services – the ‘good guys’ – were also gaining access to millions of computers and other electronic devices was a huge shock.
November 3, 2014
Read time: 2 mins
Until recently, criminals were the main concern of customers using the internet to make electronic payments. The public believed that malware and hacking were the domain of people on the wrong side of the law. The revelation that many governments and their secret services – the ‘good guys’ – were also gaining access to millions of computers and other electronic devices was a huge shock. So, perhaps it was not surprising that the website %$Linker: 2External<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-16"?><dictionary />000oLinkExternalwww.dictionary.comVisit www.dictionary.comfalsehttp://www.dictionary.com/falsefalse%> declared that ‘privacy’ was the word of 2013. Companies have been aware for years that personal data is like gold. It can be mined, sorted and sold as a product. It is so valuable that companies are prepared to provide services for no charge, in return for information about the people using them. Some customers are completely happy to hand over this information, seeing this as part of the modern world. Others are more reluctant. In ‘My life, my data, my private life’, Anne-Marie Hartmann of Oberthur Technologies looks at this new business model, where the customer is the product. Described as a marketing innovation evangelist, she will give the audience insights into this increasingly critical area of business.
‘Privacy in the digital society (Secure identity, fraud, ID management)’, 9:30 - 17:00, Room 3
The Scanacar Parking Space Classifier recognises and classifies empty parking spaces. This opens the way to mapping out parking areas and informing drivers and navigation systems about available parking spaces. It also enables efficient enforcement of illegal parking, for instance in loading bays or disabled places.
The US Institute of Transportation Engineers (ITE) and National Parking Association have agreed to work together on updating their respective Parking Generation Manual and Shared Parking tools, last revised in 2010 and 2009. Fresh analyses in the former will differentiate levels of demand in rural, general urban/suburban, dense multi-use urban and core city centre locations, said ITE CEO Jeffrey F Paniati
Cubic, whose transportation solutions power some of the major urban centres across the world, including London, San Francisco, Chicago, Vancouver, New York, Los Angeles, San Diego; Sydney; and Brisbane, will be showcasing two vital new services for the US market at the ITS World Congress Detroit.
The first is its Intelligent Transport Management Solutions (ITMS) which has already powered the transport and infrastructure projects for the Sydney and London Olympic Games. The company says that, with an unriva
Suprema’s new BioMini Slim is a high-level access-management solution for PCs. Ruggedised to IP65, and with a sleek, ergonomic design, it features Suprema’s latest 500dpi slim optical sensor, which boasts a large platen size for easy and reliable fingerprint captures. The BioMini Slim has FBI-PIV and mobile ID FAP 20 certifications and can capture fingerprints in harsh environmental conditions and direct sunlight up to 100,000 Lux. An SDK allows developers to create custom applications.
The similarly featu