If you thought India's decision to ban 86% of its cash was ambitious, wait until you hear what it may do next.
The head of a government-run policy institute said on Thursday that the country could completely eliminate the need for credit cards, debit cards and ATMs in the next three years by switching to biometric payments. Amitabh Kant said that even electronic payment methods may be "totally redundant" by 2020. Instead, all Indians will need for transactions is their thumb or eye.
"Each one of us in India will be a walking ATM," Kant said at the World Economic Forum in Davos. That would represent "the biggest technological leapfrogging ever in the history of mankind," he added.
Arundhati Bhattacharya, head of the State Bank of India, agreed that such a dramatic shift was possible.
"This is something that's eminently doable," she said, pointing out that nearly 1.1 billion of India's 1.3 billion people have already registered their biometric data under the government's unique identification program.
Source: CNN
(Score: 1, Insightful) by Anonymous Coward on Monday January 30 2017, @05:24AM
Any basic security study will tell you biometrics are essentially passwords that cannot be changed. Oh someone replicated the sequence of numbers that represents your thumbprint? Now they will always have access to everything of yours that requires said thumbprint.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by mhajicek on Monday January 30 2017, @06:50AM
They're less like passwords and more like user names.
The spacelike surfaces of time foliations can have a cusp at the surface of discontinuity. - P. Hajicek