Biometric Enrollment

Biometric

The process of capturing and storing a person's biometric data (fingerprint, iris, face) onto a smart card's secure memory. Enrollment typically occurs once during card issuance and produces a reference template used for all subsequent Match-On-Card verifications.

별칭: Enrollment

Biometric Enrollment -- Initial Biometric Data Capture

Biometric enrollmentBiometric enrollmentBiometricInitial capture and storage of biometric data onto a smart card.Click to view → is the process of capturing, processing, and storing a person's biometric data onto a smart card's secure memory, establishing the reference template used for all subsequent Match-On-Card verifications. Enrollment is a one-time operation that typically occurs during card issuance and determines the quality baseline for the card's biometric authentication accuracy.

Enrollment Process

The enrollment workflow begins with sample capture: a high-resolution sensor captures multiple biometric samples -- typically 3-5 fingerprint impressions from the same finger, or multiple facial images from different angles. A quality assessment algorithm evaluates each sample for sharpness, contrast, and coverage, discarding low-quality captures. The best-quality sample undergoes feature extraction, producing a compact biometric template (300-800 bytes for fingerprints per ISO 19794-2). This template is then written to the card's EEPROM during electrical personalization.

Enrollment Channels

Three primary enrollment channels exist for smart card biometrics. Bureau enrollment occurs at the personalization bureau during card manufacturing, using industrial-grade sensors for maximum template quality. Branch enrollment occurs at bank branches or government offices, where the cardholder provides biometric samples on a dedicated enrollment terminal that communicates with the card via ISO 7816 contact interface. Self-enrollment is emerging for biometric payment cards, where the cardholder uses the on-card fingerprint sensor at home, guided by a mobile app that verifies the enrollment quality.

Security Considerations

Enrollment is the most security-critical phase of the biometric lifecycle because it establishes the trust anchor. If an attacker can substitute their own biometric during enrollment, all subsequent authentications will validate the wrong person. To mitigate this, enrollment typically requires multi-factor identity verification (government-issued ID check, existing card PIN entry, or in-person identity proofing). The enrollment data is transmitted to the card over a secure messaging channel using SCP03 or equivalent encryption, ensuring the biometric templatebiometric templateBiometricMathematical representation of biometric data stored on card.Click to view → cannot be intercepted or tampered with in transit.

자주 묻는 질문

The smart card glossary is a comprehensive reference of technical terms, acronyms, and concepts used in smart card technology. It covers protocols (APDU, T=0, T=1), security (Common Criteria, EAL, HSM), hardware (SE, EEPROM, contact pad), and applications (EMV, ePassport, eSIM). It serves developers, product managers, and engineers.

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