Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment

Abstract Fingerprint authentication has gained attention in recent years due to its distinctiveness, low‐cost sensors, and user willingness to submit them. Its extensive deployment in our automated world raises major concerns regarding the secrecy of biometric templates and the privacy of rightful o...

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Main Authors: Shivangi Shukla, Sankita J. Patel
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2021-05-01
Series:IET Information Security
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1049/ise2.12024
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spelling doaj-5d12e6ae94e848918f9ab32a607859ae2021-07-14T13:25:10ZengWileyIET Information Security1751-87091751-87172021-05-0115325626610.1049/ise2.12024Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy CommitmentShivangi Shukla0Sankita J. Patel1Department of Computer Engineering Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology Surat Gujarat IndiaDepartment of Computer Engineering Sardar Vallabhbhai National Institute of Technology Surat Gujarat IndiaAbstract Fingerprint authentication has gained attention in recent years due to its distinctiveness, low‐cost sensors, and user willingness to submit them. Its extensive deployment in our automated world raises major concerns regarding the secrecy of biometric templates and the privacy of rightful owners in biometric systems. Fuzzy Commitment (FC) focuses on securing the biometric templates by performing authentication based on the validity of secret keys from biometric features. However, the major challenge in designing Fingerprint‐based FC is the requirement of efficient binary representation for unordered and variable minutiae points in fingerprint images. Additionally, its leakage can compromise an intrinsic characteristic of the individual. The paper proposes Fingerprint‐based FC incorporating an encoding scheme dependent on the number and type of minutiae points present near the fingerprint's core point. The biometric templates are never identical thereby, this approach allows fuzziness in minutiae points by incorporating Bose–Chaudhuri–Hocquenghem (BCH) codes for error‐correction and secures random codeword of the error‐correcting scheme as secret key by SHA‐256 hash mapping. The proposed approach is evaluated on FVC2000‐DB2, FVC2002‐DB1, FVC2002‐DB2, and FVC2004‐DB1, and the results illustrate the efficiency of the proposed scheme. Furthermore, the security analysis of stored helper data and hash mapping demonstrates that the proposed approach is secure.https://doi.org/10.1049/ise2.12024
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shivangi Shukla
Sankita J. Patel
spellingShingle Shivangi Shukla
Sankita J. Patel
Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment
IET Information Security
author_facet Shivangi Shukla
Sankita J. Patel
author_sort Shivangi Shukla
title Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment
title_short Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment
title_full Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment
title_fullStr Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment
title_full_unstemmed Securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in Fuzzy Commitment
title_sort securing fingerprint templates by enhanced minutiae‐based encoding scheme in fuzzy commitment
publisher Wiley
series IET Information Security
issn 1751-8709
1751-8717
publishDate 2021-05-01
description Abstract Fingerprint authentication has gained attention in recent years due to its distinctiveness, low‐cost sensors, and user willingness to submit them. Its extensive deployment in our automated world raises major concerns regarding the secrecy of biometric templates and the privacy of rightful owners in biometric systems. Fuzzy Commitment (FC) focuses on securing the biometric templates by performing authentication based on the validity of secret keys from biometric features. However, the major challenge in designing Fingerprint‐based FC is the requirement of efficient binary representation for unordered and variable minutiae points in fingerprint images. Additionally, its leakage can compromise an intrinsic characteristic of the individual. The paper proposes Fingerprint‐based FC incorporating an encoding scheme dependent on the number and type of minutiae points present near the fingerprint's core point. The biometric templates are never identical thereby, this approach allows fuzziness in minutiae points by incorporating Bose–Chaudhuri–Hocquenghem (BCH) codes for error‐correction and secures random codeword of the error‐correcting scheme as secret key by SHA‐256 hash mapping. The proposed approach is evaluated on FVC2000‐DB2, FVC2002‐DB1, FVC2002‐DB2, and FVC2004‐DB1, and the results illustrate the efficiency of the proposed scheme. Furthermore, the security analysis of stored helper data and hash mapping demonstrates that the proposed approach is secure.
url https://doi.org/10.1049/ise2.12024
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