Digital aiD
Digital aiD (dɪdʒɪt(ə)l ɪd) is a digital representation of a person's semantic memory created by a Neural Biometric.
Synonymous with other biometric conventions: fingerprint, faceprint, voiceprint, iris print, retina print..., the Digital ID is a unique representation of a person's identity.
Representing the results of 6 years of research and development by scientists from aiThenticate Computervision Labs at the University of Johannesburg (South Africa), a Neural Biometric assimilates and processes the vast amount of physiognomic information visible in the human face to mathematically express all the physiognomic information as a complex, irreversible, binary crypto hash (or 'Digital aiD') that can be used either to confirm (i.e. authentication) or to determine (i.e. identification) the unique identity of a person.
Whereas a typical latent fingerprint represents approximately 181,400 unique possibilities, and a typical faceprint (generated by facial recognition systems) approximately 1,814,400 unique possibilities, the Digital aiD represents approximately 29,182,858,167,028,700,000,000,000,000,000,000 unique possibilities on average.
References[edit]
Neural Biometric[edit]
Neural Biometric[edit]
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