Biometric data is defined to include fingerprints, handprints, voices, facial images, iris images and retinal images |
The bill (SB 190) from Alaska State Sen. Bill Wielechowski (D-District J) mandates that "A person may not retain or analyse, or disclose or distribute to another person, biometric information on an individual without first obtaining the informed and written consent of the individual" (Law enforcement and other parties authorised by state or federal law would be excluded). Biometric data is defined to include fingerprints, handprints, voices, facial images, iris images and retinal images. Violators would be liable for actual damages and civil penalties of as much as $100,000.
SIA CEO Richard Chace noted in the letter to Wielechowski that the federal government is implementing an identity management programme that relies on biometric technology and argued that biometrics are an important security tool that "answers the question, ‘Are you who you say you are?'"
"Biometrics provides an effective measure against fraud and identity theft in applications as diverse as personal access to buildings/computers, banking security, business-to-business transactions and ecommerce," the letter stated.
Chace also stressed that the association and its members are committed to developing security solutions that protect personal information and ensure privacy and said that they "are in the final stages of developing a framework that will help educate policymakers, consumers and industry stakeholders on technology and privacy related issues."