![data guardian vs dashlane data guardian vs dashlane](https://blogsjunction.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/01/word-image-49-300x203.png)
Scary, sobering, cautionary but also amusing to some. The Twitterati had lots of fun with the topic.
![data guardian vs dashlane data guardian vs dashlane](https://www.anoopcnair.com/wp-content/uploads/2020/09/image-110.png)
![data guardian vs dashlane data guardian vs dashlane](https://gttb.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/05/gtb-data-protection-from-shield-lock.jpg)
Press coverage was brutal, claiming that vpnMentor’s researchers had gained access to over 27.8 million records which fingerprint data, facial recognition data, face photos of users, unencrypted usernames and passwords, logs of facility access, security levels and clearance, and personal details of staff. “Major Breach Found in Biometrics system Used by Banks, UK Police and Defence Firms” But with a headline like this in the The Guardian: In this case an Israeli watchdog called vpnMentor reported that Korean-headquartered security specialist Suprema was the victim of a security breach that exposed “biometric data” for roughly one million end-users of its Biostar 2 services.įor those of you not following adoption of the use of biometric factors like fingerprints or facial recognition for “access management” – meaning the unlocking of doors in office buildings or other business establishments, the story may have gone unnoticed. It’s the third Thursday of the month, which makes it ripe for a tech story that calls all implementation of biometrics for authentication and security into question.