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Face Scan

An example of a biometric factor, which is a behavioral or physiological characteristic unique to a subject. A face scan is a process by which the shape and feature layout of a person’s face is used to establish identity or provide authentication.


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An example of a biometric factor, which is a behavioral or physiological characteristic that is unique to a subject. The layout of ridges, creases, and grooves on a person’s palm is used to establish identity or provide authentication. This is the same as a palm scan and similar to a fingerprint.
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An example of a biometric factor, which is a behavioral or physiological characteristic that is unique to a subject. The blood vessel pattern at the back of the eyeball is used to establish identity or provide authentication.
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An example of a physiological biometric factor, which is unique to a subject. It uses near-infrared light to measure vein patterns in the palm, which are as unique as fingerprints. Some palm scans identify the layout of ridges, creases, and grooves on a person’s palm to establish identity or provide authentication. See palm topography.
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Characteristics of any person that can be used to identify or authenticate the person. Physiological biometric methods include fingerprints, face scans, retina scans, iris scans, palm scans, hand geometry, and voice patterns. Behavioral biometric methods include signature dynamics and keystroke patterns.
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A form of vulnerability scan that tests the target systems without having passwords or other special information that would grant the scanner special privileges. This allows the scan to run from the perspective of an attacker but also limits the ability of the scanner to fully evaluate possible vulnerabilities.
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