Giving ID theft the finger

May 2009 News & Events

A South African company hopes to create a new market for itself by integrating biometrics into the everyday shopping experience.

1 Finger is a new incentive being launched in May 2009 by 247 Technologies. It is a solution designed to eradicate identity theft in South Africa.

Many people have had the problem of being left with debt because someone stole their identity and opened accounts on their names. When this happens, it becomes the victim’s problem to clear their name on credit bureau systems and, in many cases, the victim is even forced to settle the debt created by the criminal. In some cases the victim cannot prove he or she did not create the debt.

The 1 Finger system using a person’s identity number and/or passport number, as well as 10 fingerprints, will keep a record of all transactions where 1 Finger was used to verify the identity of the user. Not only would criminals not be able to open accounts using a stolen identity, in the unlikely event that they do, 247 Technologies will be able to prove from the vendor’s historical records that it was not the victim.

Vendor security

Sellers can also stop people fraudulently opening accounts in their businesses, paying with stolen credit cards and other activities that cost billions of rands annually. Fraud related to identity theft cost South African businesses R276-million in the first three months of 2008, according to Alexander Forbes Insurance, as reported in the Mail & Guardian on 22 April 2008.

If this is not enough of an incentive to insist on all clients using the 1 Finger system when dealing with a company, businesses can also integrate the system directly into their systems through the free software development kit for system integrators. The kit will be available in June 2009.

Wherever 1 Finger is used, a client would be able to verify the authenticity of their personal information provided by reading his/her fingerprint on a biometric reader. This will also create an audit trail of their business dealings. For a fee, users will receive an SMS each time the system is used.

Fingerprint identification is not only used by the police to solve criminal cases. It is also used by government to make pension pay outs, pay grants and by over 400 of 247 Technologies clients to control access to their business and pay salaries against time and attendance data collected via fingerprints.

For more information contact Peter Krauspe, 247 Technologies, 0861 101 738, www.247technologies.co.za





Share this article:
Share via emailShare via LinkedInPrint this page



Further reading:

Woolworths attack raises bomb preparedness questions
News & Events
Two explosions have been reported at Woolworths stores in South Africa over the past week. SMART Security Solutions asked Jimmy Roodt, an experienced and accredited explosive ordnance disposal specialist from Gauntlet Security Solutions, for his insight into the events.

Read more...
Growing adoption of AI at work
News & Events AI & Data Analytics
AI adoption accelerates worldwide, with South Africa making gains amid uneven diffusion. Locally, South Africa ranks 46th of 147 economies measured, and its AI usage increased to 23,1% in Q1 2026.

Read more...
Enterprise AI hits the wall
News & Events AI & Data Analytics
Demands for AI privacy and sovereignty expose the limits of architectures built for centralised and borderless data flows. Organisations that redesign early are gaining a measurable edge in AI readiness and scale.

Read more...
71% of organisations suffered an identity breach
News & Events Information Security
The State of Identity Security 2026 report from Sophos finds human error and poor non-human identity management are the root causes of most attacks, as agentic AI accelerates the risk.

Read more...
From the Editor's desk: Security goes mainstream
Technews Publishing News & Events
      Welcome to SMART Security’s SMART Mining & Industrial Security Handbook 2026. While the world is focused on cybersecurity and AI, physical security has become a board-level concern across South Africa’s ...

Read more...
Global security in 2026
Editor's Choice News & Events Security Services & Risk Management Industrial (Industry) Mining (Industry)
The World Security Report 2026 states: “In a world of increasing volatility, physical security has evolved. It is no longer just a defensive measure; it is a critical driver of corporate value.”

Read more...
Industry perspective on industrial cybersecurity
Technews Publishing News & Events Infrastructure Industrial (Industry)
The Industrial Security Harmonization Group has released a joint industry perspective highlighting a critical truth in industrial cybersecurity: secure communication is not determined by protocols alone, but by how they are deployed and managed in real-world environments.

Read more...
Aerial firefighter training revolution
Fire & Safety News & Events
Sophisticated new flight simulation software capable of accurately modelling the performance of firefighting helicopters could help train pilots to tackle wildfires more effectively and safely in the future.

Read more...
PoPIA turns its attention to gated access
News & Events Security Services & Risk Management
The Information Regulator has gazetted its proposed Code of Conduct for the processing of personal information at gated access points. At 65 pages long, the code signals a significant shift in how personal information is collected and managed at entry points.

Read more...
Surge in AI-enabled cybercrime and a 389% increase in ransomware
News & Events Information Security
Cybercrime no longer functions as a series of isolated campaigns; it operates as a system, with malicious hackers operating across an end-to-end life cycle and compressing the attack life cycle with shadow agents.

Read more...










While every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, the publisher and its agents cannot be held responsible for any errors contained, or any loss incurred as a result. Articles published do not necessarily reflect the views of the publishers. The editor reserves the right to alter or cut copy. Articles submitted are deemed to have been cleared for publication. Advertisements and company contact details are published as provided by the advertiser. Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd cannot be held responsible for the accuracy or veracity of supplied material.




© Technews Publishing (Pty) Ltd. | All Rights Reserved.