By Nick Heath, 14 February 2008 16:02
NEWS
Visitors to Europe will face biometric screening and automated security checks under proposals for a shake-up of EU border controls.
Under plans to strengthen checks at European borders laid out by the European Commission, international travellers would also have their stay logged and monitored by an electronic system, which could become operational by 2015.
The system would alert authorities if the person was recorded as overstaying the length of their visa.
Biometric data would be submitted by travellers from outside the EU when applying for a visa, while those not needing a permit would be checked on arrival.
Automated border control systems and guards would be able to check visitors' identities using the biometric data, with EU and trusted travellers from outside the EU able to speed up the process using automated gates.
silicon.com's A to Z of Biometrics
Click on the links below to find out everything you'll need to know about biometric security.
A is for Accuracy
B is for Behavioural biometric
C is for Cash machine
D is for Database
E is for Ear
F is for Facial recognition
G is for Gummi bears
H is for Hand geometry
I is for Iris
J is for Juan Vucetich
K is for Keystroke dynamics
L is for Liveness testing
M is for Mobile phones
N is for Network security
O is for Oxford
P is for Palm
Q is for Queues
R is for Registration
S is for Signature verification
T is for Twins
U is for Universality
V is for Voice verification
W is for Walk
X is for X-ray
Y is for Young
Z is for Zurich Airport
The EC is also investigating the possibility of requiring electronic authorisation for outside travellers as an alternative to requiring a visa.
From 2009, all EU passports will feature a digital fingerprint and photograph and, from 2011 non-EU citizens who apply for a visa will have to give their biometric details.
The measures would apply to the 24 nations within the EU's Schengen zone for passport-free travel. All EU states except the Bulgaria, Cyprus, Ireland, Romania and the UK are part of the border-free area, to which non-EU members Norway and Iceland also belong. The UK is believed to be studying whether to opt into the arrangements.
The EC is also looking at creating a European Border Surveillance System with the aim of preventing unauthorised border crossings, reducing the number of illegal immigrants dying at sea and reducing cross-border crime within the EU.
The commission says the system would use "state-of-the-art technology" for border surveillance purposes and focus first on the Mediterranean Sea, the Canary Islands and the Black Sea before being widened to the "whole maritime domain" of the EU.
Data gathered for the system would be protected by security regulations and would be kept for no longer than five years.


Comments
There is 1 comment. Join the discussion
1. Richard
Oh dear, when the Berlin Wall came down something nasty must have escaped:
We used to have a peaceable, tolerant, welcoming country:
Now, the UK has become infected by a "fortress" culture of suspicion, snooping, surveillance and (false) "security."
The UK, the EU and the USA have become obsessed with "borders"; with trying to distinguish "us" from "them."
Politicians have apparently forgotten the lessons of the "Maginot Line": Regardless of the amount of investment and technology at the front; the really nasty people will simply go around the back.
In the meantime, ordinary decent people will be greatly inconvenienced and offended; some to the point where they become new enemies.
Further, within these "secure borders," protected from fresh blood, new ideas and outside influences, society and industry will shrivel.
These high-tech. surveillance, biometric, ID & "borders" projects sound impressive - and are hideously expensive - but even when they work they are largely counter-productive.