The invention relates to biometric identification and/or authentication systems. These systems manipulate all types of biometric data such as, for example, biometric prints and digital eye, skin, face or even voice prints.
Biometric prints are increasingly used as a way of completing user passwords or handwritten signatures, in particular for applications requiring a high level of security. Indeed, the use of a biometric print is a good complement for a password or a handwritten signature, insofar as it is difficult for a biometric print to be stolen from its real owner, and it cannot be imitated or copied either. On the other hand, regarding this security and insofar as a biometric print cannot be replaced, it is essential to prevent direct access to this print in order to guarantee the security of the persons and the reliability of the print.
For this reason, it is possible for example to use known masking methods for masking the biometric print to be secured. The masked print can then be used instead of the plain print for signing messages, authenticating the identity of a person, etc. The advantage of such methods is that they use hash functions which are one-way functions, meaning they cannot be inverted. In other words, if a print masked by a hash function from a plain print is known, it is not possible to discover the plain print, even when all the parameters of the hash function are known.
It is well known, furthermore, that it is not possible to take two strictly identical biometric prints from the same individual at different times. First of all, because it is very difficult to position, in a strictly identical manner but at different times, the same measurement instrument adapted to take said biometric print. Also because the environment (temperature, humidity, etc.) and the general health condition (stress, skin disease, etc.) of the individual at the time of taking the print can interfere with the result of the process.
And yet, with the known hash functions applied to two almost identical initial data, the corresponding masked data are very different and no longer correlated, so that it is not possible, by comparing them, to deduce whether or not the initial data are identical with few errors. It is not therefore possible to use known hash functions to mask a biometric print.
A first aim of the invention is to provide a masking method using a new hash function, which is more suitable than known hash functions for masking biometric prints. In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the masking method according to the invention is used to secure a biometric print.
Finally, a second aim of the invention is to use the masking method of the invention to secure a security document such as, for example, a bank cheque.
The first aim of the invention is achieved by means of a method of masking a plain datum b having n bits, characterised in that a masked datum m is produced using the following hash function:
where p is a prime number, bi is the bit at position i of plain datum b, and qi is the prime number at position i in a set of prime numbers (qi, . . . , qn). Preferably, p is a large prime number and the components of the set of prime numbers are small.
Compared with known hash functions, the function
has the main advantage of being tolerant of errors, as will be seen in greater detail below, which means it is particularly well adapted for masking biometric data.
In a preferred embodiment of the invention, the above masking method is applied to a biometric print. For this reason, the method consists in determining a set of s real minutiae, which are characteristic of said print, mixing and arranging the real minutiae with t false minutiae, and forming a mixed biometric datum b having n=s+t bits, such that, for any i:
bi=1 if position i corresponds to a real minutia and
bi=0 if position i corresponds to a false minutia
and the hash function according to the invention is applied to this mixed datum in order to produce a masked datum.
The real and false minutiae are preferably mixed in a random fashion.
The second aim of the invention consists in a method of securing a security document, for example a bank cheque, during which, after having obtained a reference datum by masking a biometric print according to a method as described above,
A series of preferred embodiments of the invention are described below.
First of all is a detailed description of the masking method according to the invention. The following hash function is used in order to mask a plain datum b=(bn, . . . , b1), having n bits:
The function uses as parameters a set (qn, . . . , q1) of small prime numbers, for example integers having around 60 bits. The function also uses a parameter p which is a large integer, for example having around 1024 bits. p is preferably selected such that 2*qn, ˆ2t<p<4*qnˆ2t, where t is a number of accepted errors.
Unlike known hash functions, the function according to the invention is not very sensitive to errors, that is to say that, knowing two data m, μ masked by this function, it is possible to tell whether the corresponding original plain data b, β are identical, with a maximum of approximately t errors.
Indeed, m, μ are obtained by the following relations:
The following is also defined:
where Δi is the set of indexes i comprised between 1 and n for which bi=1 and βi=0, and where Γi is the set of indexes comprised between 1 and n for which bi=0 and βi=1. The sum of the sizes of the sets Δi and Γi is at most equal to t, t being the number of β bits that are different from the b bits in the same position, corresponding to the maximum acceptable number of errors.
a and α, which are products of small prime numbers qi, are also small numbers, which additionally verify the relation: a*λ=α mod p. From the latter equality and the number λ, it is then possible to calculate the numbers a and α. Breaking down the numbers a and α into prime numbers makes it possible, ultimately, to factorise a and α. The breakdown is facilitated in part by the fact that a and α are broken down, in principle, into small prime numbers. If a and α are broken down over the set (qn, . . . , q1), then it can be deduced that the original data b and β are identical, with a maximum of t errors.
The following is a description of a preferred embodiment of the masking method using the masking function described above, for masking a biometric print.
In the following example, the physical biometric print to be masked is a digital print characterised in having a predefined number s of real minutiae. A real minutia is a detail of a print at a given point of the physical print, such as the breakage of a line, a fork on a line, etc. Digitally, a minutia can be translated by a chain of characters including information on the position and the shape of the minutia.
According to the invention, in order to mask the physical print, the first step is to add to the set of real minutiae a set of t false minutiae, also defined by a chain of characters but which do not correspond to a real minutia of the physical print. In an example, a false minutia is defined in a completely random manner, and a set of t=80 false minutiae is added to a set of s=20 real minutiae.
The order of the real and false minutiae is mixed, for example in a random manner, and then a mixed datum b=(bn, . . . , b1) is formed, having n=s+t bits so that, for any i:
bi=1 if position i corresponds to a real minutia and
bi=0 if position i corresponds to a false minutia.
The mixed datum b is then masked using the masking method according to the invention in order to produce a masked datum so that:
The masked datum m can then be stored in a database, on an ID card, in a memory of a chip card, etc. The masked datum m can be used as a reference datum, for example in order to verify the identity of a person, in the following manner.
The following is sufficient for verifying the identity of a person:
In order to determine whether there is concordance between m and μ:
is calculated, followed by a and α using the relation a*λ=α mod p, where a and α are small compared with the integer p, by the continued fraction algorithm, for example.
One application considered for the masking method according to the invention relates to securing a security document, such as a bank cheque. For this, according to the invention, a biometric print of the owner of the security document is masked using a masking method as described above, in order to produce a reference datum.
According to a first embodiment of the invention, the reference datum is stored on or in the security document, for example by printing.
According to a second embodiment of the invention, the reference datum is associated with a barcode, the associated reference datum/barcode couple is stored in a database, and the barcode is stored, by printing for example, on the security document.
It is sufficient then, when the security document is handed over, for example, to take a biometric print of the person handing the document over at the same time as the document is received and then to check that the biometric print of the person handing over the document actually matches the biometric print included in the reference datum stored on the document or associated with the barcode stored on the document.
In the first embodiment of the invention, the verification can be carried out by any person, the reference datum being stored directly on the document. In the second embodiment of the invention, the verification can be carried out by any person having access to the database, who is not necessarily the person receiving the document.
The barcode is made according to known techniques. It is possible, for example, to use a barcode with one dimension, consisting in a series of vertical bars with variable thickness and separation. The choice of the shape of the barcode depends in the practice on the number of reference data to be stored, each reference datum corresponding to a different person.
The database in which the reference datum/associated barcode couples are stored is preferably accessible for verification purposes only to a reduced number of people, according to the desired level of security: access can be, for example, authorised to any person who must receive security documents or, in a more restricted fashion, only to a certificate-issuing authority.
In a practical example, the security document is a bank cheque and the digital print of its owner is stored on the cheque in the form of a barcode. A retailer has a device for reading and masking a print equipped with means for reading a print, masking it and then printing the associated masked datum. The issuing bank of the cheque has exclusive access to the database in which the masked reference datum (corresponding to the masked initial datum) and the associated barcode are stored; this access allows the bank to verify that the print left by the person that presented the cheque to the retailer and which the latter has masked and printed on the cheque, actually corresponds to that of the owner of the cheque.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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0405236 | May 2004 | FR | national |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/EP05/52151 | 5/11/2005 | WO | 11/14/2006 |