Mandiant Corp. to participate in DARPA initiative to secure military computers without passwords

Oct. 11, 2013
ARLINGTON, Va., 11 Oct. 2013. U.S. military researchers are looking to cyber security experts at Mandiant Corp. in Arlington, Va., to develop software approaches for securing military computer systems with advanced biometrics rather than user passwords in ways that focus on the unique aspects of the individual.
ARLINGTON, Va., 11 Oct. 2013. U.S. military researchers are looking to cyber security experts at Mandiant Corp. in Arlington, Va., to develop software approaches for securing military computers with advanced biometrics rather than user passwords in ways that focus on the unique aspects of the individual.

Information technology (IT) experts at the U.S. Defense Advanced Research Projects Agency (DARPA) in Arlington, Va., are awarding a $2.5 million contract to Mandiant for the second phase of the Active Authentication (AA) program, which seeks to expand biometrics research to validate an individual’s identity without interrupting what the person is doing.

Biometrics refers to a collection of characteristics that can recognize humans through their physical or behavioral traits. A human processes information in a unique way, and when he interacts with computers, he leaves behind what DARPA scientists call a “cognitive fingerprint.”

The current way to validate a user’s identity to gain access to secure computers requires humans to do something that is inherently difficult: create, remember, and manage long, complex passwords, DARPA officials explain.

After gaining access to secure computers, today's typical systems have no way to verify that the original user originally is the user still in control of the keyboard. The DARPA AA program seeks to develop ways of validating a user's identity using a device that focuses on the person's unique aspects.

The program focuses on two areas: first on the user's computational behavioral traits; and second on developing an application called a biometric platform that can integrate all biometrics available on one device to validate the user's identify -- whether the biometrics collected are behavioral, cognitive, or physical.

Mandiant experts will focus not only on users of military desktop and laptop computers, but also on those using mobile devices like smart phones and tablet computers.

Eventually the DARPA AA program will develop more biometric security systems for desktop and laptop computers and mobile devices; develop biometric platforms for mobile environments; and moving the desktop application to an operational partner.

For more information contact Mandiant Corp. online at www.mandiant.com, or DARPA at www.darpa.mil.

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