Untargeted Near-collision Attacks on Biometrics: Real-world Bounds and Theoretical Limits
Axel Durbet, Paul-Marie Grollemund, Kevin Thiry-Atighehchi

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the security of biometric recognition systems against untargeted near-collision attacks, providing real-world bounds and theoretical limits based on accuracy metrics and probabilistic modeling.
Contribution
It offers a formal analysis of untargeted attack complexity using FMR and FPIR metrics and establishes theoretical security bounds for biometric systems.
Findings
Estimated maximum database size for given FMR to maintain security
Derived attack complexity based on system parameters
Assessed security limits through probabilistic modeling
Abstract
A biometric recognition system can operate in two distinct modes: identification or verification. In the first mode, the system recognizes an individual by searching the enrolled templates of all the users for a match. In the second mode, the system validates a user's identity claim by comparing the fresh provided template with the enrolled template. The biometric transformation schemes usually produce binary templates that are better handled by cryptographic schemes, and the comparison is based on a distance that leaks information about the similarities between two biometric templates. Both the experimentally determined false match rate and false non-match rate through recognition threshold adjustment define the recognition accuracy, and hence the security of the system. To our knowledge, few works provide a formal treatment of security in case of minimal information leakage, i.e., the…
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Taxonomy
TopicsUser Authentication and Security Systems · Biometric Identification and Security · Digital and Cyber Forensics
